question
stringlengths
554
7.73k
qid
stringlengths
42
82
output
stringlengths
76
207
ctxs
listlengths
100
100
June Preisser ( June 26 , 1920 -- September 19 , 1984 ) was an American actress , briefly popular in musical films during the late 1930s and early 1940s , many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat . Born in [START_ENT] New Orleans [END_ENT] , Louisiana , Preisser was one of six children , and was an underweight baby . Her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age , in an attempt to build her strength . There she , and her sister Cherry , learnt acrobatics . Their mother was keen to have them follow a career in showbusiness , especially when their father died suddenly , leaving the family with few options to make a living . When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home , and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville , and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936 . The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States , and also performed in Europe , most notably for . Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage , and June was signed to a film contract by . Her first film Dancing Co-Ed ( 1939 ) provided only a small part , but her next film , Babes in Arms ( 1939 ) , gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland . She performed with Rooney and Garland again in Strike Up the Band ( 1940 ) , and with Rooney in two " Andy Hardy " films , Judge Hardy and Son ( 1939 ) and Andy Hardy 's Private Secretary ( 1941 ) . Gallant Sons ( 1940 ) placed her in a comedic murder mystery , and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in ( 1941 ) , and followed this with Sweater Girl ( 1942 ) , opposite Eddie Bracken . She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry , and the birth of a son , Ricky . By this time , MGM had little interest in promoting her , and she left to work for Monogram Pictures . She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years , and played the character " Dodie Rogers " in seven " high school " comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948 . Her final film was ( 1948 ) , and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of Annie Get Your Gun
bf28b58e-ee30-4565-be9c-a598f05ba7c4_June_Preisse:0
[{"answer": "New Orleans", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "53842", "title": "New Orleans"}]}]
[ { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n, and June was signed to a film contract by MGM. Her first film, \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), provided only a small part, but her next film, \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. She performed with Rooney and Garland again in \"Strike Up the Band\" (1940), and with Rooney in two \"Andy Hardy\" films, \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939) and \"Andy Hardy", "id": "17067760" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nJune Preisser (June 26, 1920 – September 19, 1984) was an American actress, popular in musical films during the late 1930s and through the 1940s, many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat. Born in New Orleans, Preisser was one of six children. An underweight child, her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age, in an attempt to build her strength. There she, and her sister Cherry, learned acrobatics. Their mother was keen to have them follow a career", "id": "17067758" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n's Private Secretary\" (1941). \"Gallant Sons\" (1940) placed her in a comedic murder mystery, and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in \"Henry Aldrich for President\" (1941), and followed this with \"Sweater Girl\" (1942), opposite Eddie Bracken. She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry, and the birth of a son, Ricky. By this time, MGM had little interest in promoting her, and she left to work", "id": "17067761" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nfor Monogram Pictures. She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years, and played the character \"Dodie Rogers\" in seven \"high school\" comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948. Her final film was Music Man (1948), and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of \"Annie Get Your Gun\", she retired from acting. She divorced not long after, and taught dancing and acrobatics in Los Angeles, before moving with her son to Florida. They", "id": "17067762" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nin show business, especially when their father died suddenly, leaving the family with few options to make a living. When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home, and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville, and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936. The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States, and also performed in Europe, most notably for George VI of the United Kingdom. Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage", "id": "17067759" }, { "contents": "Melody Trail\n\n\nand Prejudice\" (1940). In 1939, she played the role of Carreen O'Hara, the sister of Scarlet O'Hara, in the film \"Gone with the Wind\". From 1937 to 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. She retired from films in 1950. Rutherford died on June 11, 2012 at her home in Beverly Hills, California. \"Melody Trail\" was filmed August 21–27, 1935. The film had an operating budget of $15,075", "id": "2111015" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nHardy Family movies as a literal girl-next-door to Rooney's character Andy Hardy, in \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938), although Hardy's love interest was played by Lana Turner. They teamed as lead characters for the first time in \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), ultimately appearing in five additional films, including Hardy films \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\" (1940) and \"Life Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland stated that she, Rooney, and other young", "id": "13593082" }, { "contents": "Annie Get Your Gun (film)\n\n\n, MGM's biggest musical comedy star, was originally cast as Annie Oakley. She recorded all her songs for the soundtrack and worked for two months under the direction of Busby Berkeley and dance director Robert Alton. Berkeley and Garland had worked together previously in the late 1930s and early 1940s in a successful series of backstage musicals teaming her with fellow juvenile star Mickey Rooney. Berkeley had been fired from the Garland/Rooney musical \"Girl Crazy\" in 1943 due to personality clashes with musical director Roger Edens and for driving Garland very", "id": "13779025" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nYear for her live recording \"Judy at Carnegie Hall\" (1961). Garland began performing in vaudeville as a child with her two older sisters, and was later signed to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a teenager. Although she appeared in more than two dozen films with MGM and received acclaim for many different roles, she is often best remembered for her portrayal of Dorothy Gale in \"The Wizard of Oz\" (1939). Garland was a frequent on-screen partner of both Mickey Rooney and Gene Kelly,", "id": "13593062" }, { "contents": "Louise LaPlanche\n\n\n, portraying a gypsy girl in \"The Hunchback of Notre Dame\" in 1923. Both LaPlanche began competing in California beauty pageants. In 1939, Louise LaPlanche was crowned Miss Catalina. Her Miss Catalina win led to a film contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). She appeared in the 1940 MGM musical film, \"Strike Up the Band\", which starred Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. LaPlanche later left MGM and signed on to Paramount Studios. She was cast in several Paramount films, including 1942's", "id": "3022959" }, { "contents": "Bonita Granville\n\n\nfilm success led to Granville reprising the role in three sequels from 1938 to 1939, including \"Nancy Drew... Reporter\" (1939). As a young adult, she was once again cast in supporting roles, often in prestigious films such as \"Now, Voyager\" (1942), as well as two Andy Hardy films with Mickey Rooney, \"Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble\" (1944) and \"Love Laughs at Andy Hardy\" (1946). She is also remembered for her starring role in the World", "id": "12873960" }, { "contents": "Eve Arden\n\n\nThis was followed by roles in the crime film \"The Forgotten Woman\" (1939), and the comedy \"At the Circus\" (1939), opposite Groucho Marx, a role that would require her to perform acrobatics. In 1940, she appeared opposite Clark Gable in \"Comrade X\", followed by the drama \"Manpower\" (1941), opposite Marlene Dietrich. She also appeared in a supporting part in the Red Skelton comedy \"Whistling in the Dark\" (1941), and the romantic comedy \"", "id": "10321268" }, { "contents": "Shirley Temple\n\n\nher departure from Twentieth Century-Fox, Shirley was signed by MGM for her comeback; the studio made plans to team her with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney for the Andy Hardy series. The idea was quickly abandoned. The next idea was teaming her with Garland and Rooney for the musical \"Babes on Broadway\". Fearing that either of the latter two could easily upstage Temple, MGM replaced her with Virginia Weidler. As a result, her only film for Metro was \"Kathleen\" in 1941, a story about an", "id": "7504264" }, { "contents": "Barbara Read\n\n\ncompany. When she failed to receive any roles because of her lack of experience, she joined the Laguna Beach Players theater, where she acted in a new play each month for two years. Her first film appearance was one of the three principal girls in the 1936 comedy film \"Three Smart Girls\", which also starred Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. From 1937 through 1939, Read appeared in nine films, most notably starring in \"The Spellbinder\", opposite Lee Tracy. From 1940 through 1948, she appeared in", "id": "5406875" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy\n\n\nLife Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland's character, Betsy Booth, is an aspiring singer and she sings in the first two of these films. However, although Garland songs were planned for the final film, they were eventually dropped. Unlike Garland-Rooney films outside of the \"Andy Hardy\" series, Rooney's Hardy character is not a musician, so Garland and Rooney do not perform together in the Hardy films. Rooney played the character continuously from age 16 to 25, when he appeared in", "id": "7714497" }, { "contents": "Fay Holden\n\n\nthe depression era. Eventually they left Vancouver and moved to Hollywood. Holden appeared in 46 motion pictures between 1935 and 1958, but is best known for her recurring role as Emily Hardy, mother of Mickey Rooney's character in the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" film series. The series was enormously popular in the late 1930s and early '40s, and Holden was in 15 of the 16 Hardy movies, surpassed only by Rooney, who was in all 16. Holden is also remembered for her performance as Hazel, the mother", "id": "15552902" }, { "contents": "Margaret Early\n\n\nBrent, Bette Davis, and Fay Bainter. She later became a freelance actress and found herself working in various roles at such studios as RKO, Warner Bros., and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her other screen roles include parts in \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939), \"Strike Up The Band\" (1940), \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" (1941), and \"Stage Door Canteen\" (1943). She made her last screen appearance in \"Cinderella Jones\" (1946)", "id": "11267109" }, { "contents": "Sheila Darcy\n\n\n1935 her career had taken off, and from then until 1941 she had roles in 41 films. In most of her early films, she played the heroine in B-movies, often Westerns. Darcy's best known roles were as the female lead in cliffhangers, such as the 1939 film \"Zorro's Fighting Legion\", in which she performed opposite Reed Hadley. She also played the Dragon Lady in the serial \"Terry and the Pirates\", released in 1940. In Westerns, she often played opposite popular cowboy", "id": "21067295" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nIn 1937, Rooney made his first film alongside Judy Garland with \"Thoroughbreds Don't Cry\". Garland and Rooney became close friends as they co-starred in future films and became a successful song-and-dance team. Audiences delighted in seeing the \"playful interactions between the two stars showcase a wonderful chemistry\". Along with three of the \"Andy Hardy\" films, where she portrayed a girl attracted to Andy, they appeared together in a string of successful musicals, including \"Babes in Arms\" (1939", "id": "5690267" }, { "contents": "Brenda Marshall\n\n\nArdis Ankerson (September 29, 1915 – July 30, 1992), known as Brenda Marshall, was a Filipino-born, American film actress. Marshall made her first film appearance in the 1939 \"Espionage Agent\". The following year, she played the leading lady to Errol Flynn in \"The Sea Hawk\". After divorcing actor Richard Gaines in 1940, she married William Holden in 1941, and her own career soon slowed. She starred opposite James Cagney in \"Captains of the Clouds\" (1942).", "id": "14392731" }, { "contents": "Julie Haydon\n\n\nmade by MGM. In 1932, she signed with RKO, and her first major role came that year in \"The Conquerors\", directed by William Wellman Her most notable performance came in 1935's \"The Scoundrel\" playing opposite Noël Coward, but, despite a new contract with MGM, only a few more films were to come in her short career, including \"A Family Affair\" (1937), the initial movie in the Andy Hardy series. Some have held that it was Haydon and not Fay Wray who", "id": "19690260" }, { "contents": "Jean Darling\n\n\nAssociation. She turned down an offer to appear alongside Mickey Rooney in one of the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" movies, and went on Broadway, making her debut in the musical \"Count Me In\" in 1942. Darling's stage career hit a real high when she landed the role of Carrie Pipperidge in the original Broadway production of \"Carousel\" in 1945. She appeared in 850 consecutive performances. Her role as Carrie Pipperidge helped her with parts for radio and TV in the 1950s. She hosted her own television show", "id": "1616169" }, { "contents": "List of Lana Turner performances\n\n\nLana Turner was an American actress who appeared in over fifty films during her career, which spanned four decades. Discovered in 1937 at age 16, she signed a contract with Warner Bros. and appeared in several films for the studio before signing a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The studio's co-founder, Louis B. Mayer, helped further her career by casting her in several youth-oriented comedies and musicals, including \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941),", "id": "7891475" }, { "contents": "Marguerite Chapman\n\n\ncontract to Warner Brothers in 1941, and then with Columbia from 1942 to 1948. She made her film debut in 1940, working for the next two years in small roles. In 1942, her big break came with Republic Pictures when she was cast in the leading female role in the twelve-part adventure film serial \"Spy Smasher\", a production that has been ranked among the best serials ever made. Chapman soon began receiving more leading roles and appeared opposite important stars such as Edward G. Robinson and George Sanders.", "id": "2722471" }, { "contents": "Jeanne Cagney\n\n\nRKO Pictures. However, she signed a long-term contract with Paramount Pictures. She appeared in 19 films between 1939 and 1965, including four films with her brother James: \"Yankee Doodle Dandy\" (1942), \"The Time of Your Life\" (1948), \"A Lion Is in the Streets\" (1953), and \"Man of a Thousand Faces\" (1957). Cagney gave a noted performance opposite Mickey Rooney in the film noir crime film \"Quicksand\" (1950). Cagney", "id": "6954933" }, { "contents": "Little Annie Rooney (1925 film)\n\n\nLittle Annie Rooney is a 1925 American silent comedy-drama film starring Mary Pickford and directed by William Beaudine. Pickford, one of the most successful actresses of the silent era, was best known throughout her career for her iconic portrayals of penniless young girls. After generating only modest box office revenue playing adults in her previous two films, Pickford wrote and produced \"Little Annie Rooney\" to cater to silent film audiences. Though she was 33 years old, Pickford played the title role, an Irish girl living in the slums", "id": "236551" }, { "contents": "Edith Barrett\n\n\n, she married leading man Vincent Price in 1938. The marriage ended in 1948. She and Price had one son, author/poet and environmental activist Vincent Barrett Price (born 1940). Her biggest Broadway success was as star of the now-obscure production \"Mrs. Moonlight\". In her first film, \"Ladies in Retirement\" (1941), she played one of the two half-witted half-sisters of Ida Lupino's homicidal character. Her best remembered movie role is possibly Mrs. Holland's mother-", "id": "18853813" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\nHardy film, \"A Family Affair\", in 1937. Mickey Rooney played Andy Hardy in the series, supported by Lewis Stone, Ann Rutherford, and Fay Holden. The movies were directed by George B. Seitz. Parker's character, Marion, appeared in most of the films, and her romances were a recurring feature of the series. Though she and the character she played were absent from the last two Andy Hardy films of the 1940s, Parker came out of retirement to play Marian Hardy in one more movie,", "id": "18919252" }, { "contents": "Nancy Walker\n\n\nrole provided Walker with her film debut when she signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to make a movie version, starring Lucille Ball (filmed in 1943). In 1943, she also appeared with Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in the second film version of \"Girl Crazy\". Her next film, \"Broadway Rhythm\", in which she had a featured musical number backed by Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra, \"Milkman, Keep Those Bottles Quiet\", ended Walker's contract with Metro. Her dry comic", "id": "9657966" }, { "contents": "List of Gloria Stuart performances\n\n\nstarred in two films opposite Shirley Temple: \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936), and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938), both for 20th Century Fox. She subsequently co-starred in \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939) opposite Don Ameche. Dissatisfied with her career in film, Stuart shifted her focus to stage acting. Between 1940 and 1942, Stuart appeared in numerous summer stock plays in New England, including a 1940 production of \"Our Town\" in which she starred alongside its playwright", "id": "19503931" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nBabes in Arms is the 1939 American film version of the 1937 Broadway musical of the same name. The film version stars Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland, and features Charles Winninger, Guy Kibbee, June Preisser, Grace Hayes, and Betty Jaynes. The film concerns a group of youngsters trying to put on a show to prove their vaudevillian parents wrong and make it to Broadway. The original Broadway script was significantly revamped, restructured, and rewritten to accommodate Hollywood's needs. In 1921, vaudeville performer Joe Moran (Winninger)", "id": "9219782" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nhim when he transferred to MGM in 1938. Turner attracted attention by playing the role of a murder victim in her first film, LeRoy's \"They Won't Forget\" (1937), and she later transitioned into featured roles, often appearing as an ingénue. During the early 1940s, Turner established herself as a leading actress and one of MGM's top performers, appearing in such films as the film noir \"Johnny Eager\" (1941); the musical \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941); the horror film", "id": "11929991" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nthe stature of most leading men. He appeared in a number of films, including \"Words and Music\" in 1948, which paired him for the last time with Garland on film (he appeared with her on one episode as a guest on \"The Judy Garland Show\"). He briefly starred in a CBS radio series, \"Shorty Bell\", in the summer of 1948, and reprised his role as \"Andy Hardy\", with most of the original cast, in a syndicated radio version of \"The", "id": "5690276" }, { "contents": "Donna Reed\n\n\nmany starlets at MGM, she played Mickey Rooney's love interest in an Andy Hardy film, in her case the hugely popular \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942). She was second billed in a children's film, \"Mokey\" (1942). Reed played a love interest in \"Calling Dr. Gillespie\" (1942) and \"Apache Trail\" (1942), then did a thriller with Edward Arnold, \"Eyes in the Night\" (1942), directed by Fred Zinnemann. Reed had", "id": "13840841" }, { "contents": "Evalyn Knapp\n\n\nHis Private Secretary\", a light comedy in which Wayne portrays a suit-and-tie wearing playboy determined to win her over. She also appeared in \"Corruption\" that year opposite Preston Foster. One of her better known film roles was opposite Ken Maynard in the 1934 film \"In Old Santa Fe\" featuring Gene Autry in his first screen appearance, in which he sang with a bluegrass band. She worked through 1941, but her career slowed afterward. In 1943, she played her last role, uncredited,", "id": "560741" }, { "contents": "Kathryn Grayson\n\n\nexercise. Within a year, Grayson had her first screen test. However, the studio executives were not satisfied, and she went through a further six months of lessons until she made her first film appearance in 1941's \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" as the character's secretary Kathryn Land. In the film, she takes part in three musical numbers. Two further films were planned for Grayson in 1941; \"White House Girl\", which was later made in 1948 with Durbin, and \"Very Warm for May", "id": "20045432" }, { "contents": "Susi Nicoletti\n\n\nSusi Nicoletti (3 September 1918 – 5 June 2005) was a Bavarian-born actress best remembered today for over 100 supporting roles mostly in comedy films. She was born as Susanne Emilie Luise Adele Habersack in Munich, but spent most of her childhood with her parents in Amsterdam. Back in Munich, she made her stage debut at age 13. Two years later she became a ballerina. In the early 1930s she turned to cabaret. In 1939, she was offered her first film role. In 1940 she moved to", "id": "6091110" }, { "contents": "Dorothy Morris\n\n\nShe did a screen test for the female lead in \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942), but lost to Donna Reed. Appearing in bit parts in several of the studio's more successful films, Morris was signed to a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract in 1941. For one of her early film roles, \"Cry 'Havoc'\" (1943), she affected a British accent. Her next picture was the well-received drama \"The Human Comedy\", which featured a star cast,", "id": "323808" }, { "contents": "The Courtship of Andy Hardy\n\n\nThe Courtship of Andy Hardy is a 1942 film, part of the Andy Hardy series. It gave an early role to Donna Reed although Mickey Rooney had lobbied for his then-wife Ava Gardner to have her part. Within a few months of the film's release, she filed for divorce. This was the 12th entry in the long-running \"Andy Hardy\" series of sixteen. When Carvel teenager and new tow truck-owner Andy Hardy is stopped by a policeman for driving without a license plate, a radio", "id": "20736523" }, { "contents": "Mae Busch\n\n\nMae Busch (18 June 1891 – 20 April 1946) was an Australian-born actress who worked in both silent and sound films in early Hollywood. In the latter part of her career she appeared in many Laurel and Hardy comedies, where she frequently played Hardy's shrewish wife. Mae Busch was born Annie May Busch in Melbourne, Victoria to popular Australian vaudeville performers Elizabeth Maria Lay and Frederick William Busch. Her mother had been active since 1883 under the stage names \"Dora Devere\" and then \"Dora Busch\";", "id": "10830566" }, { "contents": "Hannelore Schroth\n\n\ndebut at the age of nine in 1931's Max Ophüls' comedy \"Dann schon lieber Lebertran\" opposite her mother. Until age sixteen she attended drama school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Her early film successes include \"Spiel im Sommerwind\" (1938), \"Weisser Flieder\" (1939) and \"Kitty und die Weltkonferenz\" (1939) - the latter of which was her first leading role. During World War II, Hannelore Schroth continued performing in films. Unlike her father, Heinrich Schroth, who was by", "id": "16153872" }, { "contents": "Lupe Vélez\n\n\npopular actress, RKO Pictures did not renew her contract in 1934. Over the next few years, Vélez worked for various studio as a freelance actress; she also spent two years in England where she filmed \"The Morals of Marcus\" and \"Gypsy Melody\" (both 1936). She returned to Los Angeles the following year where she appeared in the final part of the Wheeler & Woolsey comedy \"High Flyers\" (1937). Vélez made her final appearance on Broadway in the 1938 musical \"You Never Know\"", "id": "20716058" }, { "contents": "Katharine Kavanaugh\n\n\nher biggest claims to fame was helping to create the Jones Family characters, who would appear in 17 low-budget films between 1936 and 1940. The first film in the series, \"Every Saturday Night\", was released in 1936, and Kavanaugh would also co-write \"Educating Father\", released later that same year. While her screenwriting career cooled in the late 1930s, she continued writing plays that were produced in the Los Angeles area until her death in 1942. She and her husband, Oliver Ziegfeld (", "id": "21036559" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\n, including \"The Wizard of Oz\" and \"Babes in Arms\". She was the fourth person to receive the award as well as only one of twelve in history to ever be presented with one. Garland starred in three films released in 1940: \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\", \"Strike Up the Band\", and \"Little Nellie Kelly\". In the last, she played her first adult role, a dual role of both mother and daughter. \"Little Nellie Kelly\" was purchased from George M.", "id": "13593089" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nliving on her own. In late 1949 Hardi and her husband moved to Jakarta. Two years later she made her feature film debut in a bit role in the Produksi Film Negara (PFN; State Film Corporation)'s \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". The following year she took a starring role in another PFN film, \"Si Pintjang\", portraying an old woman; as she was only twenty-four, she was artificially aged with make-up. That same year she appeared as the lead love interest in", "id": "15623084" }, { "contents": "Jane Frazee\n\n\nB film \"Melody and Moonlight\" (1940) for Republic Pictures. Shortly after the film's release she was signed by Universal Pictures and was featured in \"Buck Privates\", the high-grossing 1941 comedy/World War II film starring Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The strong impression she made in that film elevated her to leading-lady roles in Universal's popular \"B\" musicals, usually appearing opposite Robert Paige. She left Universal in late 1942, when she married actor-director Glenn Tryon, who", "id": "11708629" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\n\n\nAndy Hardy Meets Debutante is a 1940 American romantic comedy film directed by George B. Seitz. The film stars Lewis Stone, Mickey Rooney, Cecilia Parker, Fay Holden and Judy Garland. It is the ninth of the \"Andy Hardy\" full-length film series. Andy Hardy (Mickey Rooney) from Carvel becomes infatuated with a well-known young socialite, Daphne Fowler (Diana Lewis), from New York City. Even though he hasn’t met the woman in person, he drops her name to his friends and", "id": "11382757" }, { "contents": "Martha Vickers\n\n\nplayed minor roles in several films during the early 1940s, working first at Universal Studios and then at RKO Pictures. She next went to Warner Bros., where \"they gave her the star push, rearranging her surname to 'Vickers.'\" Her work there included the role of Carmen Sternwood, the promiscuous, drug-addicted younger sister of Lauren Bacall's character in \"The Big Sleep\" (1946). She also starred in a musical, \"The Time, the Place and the Girl\", followed by", "id": "721594" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nwas over, she was summoned back to work and ultimately performed two songs as a guest in the Rodgers and Hart biopic \"Words and Music\" (1948), which was her last appearance with Mickey Rooney. Despite the all-star cast, \"Words and Music\" barely broke even at the box office. Having regained her strength, as well as some needed weight during her suspension, Garland felt much better and in the fall of 1948, she returned to MGM to replace a pregnant June Allyson for the musical", "id": "13593101" }, { "contents": "Martha O'Driscoll\n\n\n's Dangerous\" (1937), she was not credited by name. In the Deanna Durbin vehicle \"Mad About Music\" (1937), she was billed as \"pretty girl.\" Her face appeared on such advertisements as Charm-Kurl Supreme Cold Wave and Max Factor Hollywood Face Powder. Universal lent O'Driscoll to MGM for parts in \"The Secret of Dr Kildare\" (1939) and \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1940), starring Mickey Rooney. RKO, however, gave O'Driscoll her first two starring", "id": "20196774" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nMarlia Hardi (also Marlia Hardy; 10 March 192718 June 1984) was an Indonesian film actress active from 1951 to 1983. Born in the Central Javan city of Magelang, she took to the stage in the 1940s before moving to Jakarta in 1949. Two years later she made her feature film debut in \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". Over the next two decades she appeared in over seventy films, became recognized for her depictions of mothers, and received the Citra Award for Best Supporting Actress. Despite her productiveness, however", "id": "15623082" }, { "contents": "Susan Peters\n\n\nLos Angeles. After completing filming of the comedy \"Andy Hardy's Double Life\" (1942) in which she had a lead role, Mervyn LeRoy cast Peters in the drama \"Random Harvest\", in which she portrayed a young woman who falls in love with her step-uncle. The film was one of the top 25 highest-earning films of the year, and Peters's performance garnered her critical acclaim, earning her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. The success of \"Random Harvest\" led", "id": "17519590" }, { "contents": "Paulette Goddard\n\n\nshe appeared as an uncredited extra in two films, the Laurel and Hardy short film \"Berth Marks\" (1929), and George Fitzmaurice's drama \"The Locked Door\" (1929). Following her divorce, she briefly visited Europe before returning to Hollywood in late 1930 with her mother. Her second attempt at acting was no more successful than the first, as she landed work only as an extra. In 1930, she signed her first film contract with producer Samuel Goldwyn to appear as a Goldwyn Girl in \"", "id": "3980436" }, { "contents": "Trixie Friganza\n\n\nTrixie Friganza (born Delia O'Callaghan; November 29, 1870 – February 27, 1955) began her career as an operetta soubrette, working her way from the chorus to starring in musical comedies to having her own feature act on the vaudeville circuit. She transitioned to film in the early 1920s mostly playing small characters that were quirky and comedic and retired from the stage in 1940 due to health concerns. She spent her last years teaching drama to young women in a convent school and when she died she left everything to the convent", "id": "13928014" }, { "contents": "Susan Hayward\n\n\nSusan Hayward (born Edythe Marrenner; June 30, 1917 – March 14, 1975) was an American actress and model. After working as a fashion model, Hayward traveled to Hollywood in 1937. She secured a film contract and played several small supporting roles over the next few years. By the late 1940s, the quality of her film roles had improved, and she achieved recognition for her dramatic abilities with the first of five Academy Award nominations for Best Actress for her performance as an alcoholic in \"Smash-Up,", "id": "14143916" }, { "contents": "Nella Walker\n\n\nyear to 1938, she had 23 film appearances. Her biggest film appearance during this period was in \"Young Dr. Kildare\" with Lionel Barrymore and Lew Ayres. Throughout the 1930s, her career was strong, and despite never being a premier star, she repeatedly had solid acting roles. She finished the decade strongly in 1939 with nine film roles, only three of which were uncredited. The 1940s mirrored her success of the previous decade in many ways, with appearances in 37 films from 1940 to 1947. Later in her", "id": "4686869" }, { "contents": "May Wallace\n\n\nMay Wallace (August 23, 1877 – December 11, 1938) was an American film actress. She appeared in 63 films between 1914 and 1939. Wallace was born in Russiaville, Indiana and died in Los Angeles, California, where she worked in Hollywood as a film actress. She often played supporting roles for producer Hal Roach in his Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang comedies, mostly in maternal roles. Wallace was married to Thomas W. Maddox until her death, they had one daughter and one son. She died of", "id": "9169980" }, { "contents": "Ora Carew\n\n\na film editor. Ora's birth year has been listed as 1893, on her death certificate and is also what her grave says, but Utah birth index and the 1900 census indicate 1891. She was educated by private tutors and at Roland Hall Seminary. After her father died on June 19, 1896, her mother moved with her three children to California. Her screen career began with MGM, following numerous engagements in vaudeville, musical comedy and stock. Some of her most notable films with MGM were \"Go West,", "id": "19207733" }, { "contents": "Eilene Janssen\n\n\nMary Eilene Janssen (born May 25, 1938), is a retired American film and television actress. Eilene Janssen was born in Los Angeles, California on May 25, 1938, to parents Henry Janssen and Mary Ellen Thompson. She began her film career as a child actress in the early 1940s. With her father being a longtime worker for Universal Studios, Eilene Janssen made her first screen appearance in the 1940 film \"Sandy Gets Her Man\". She continued to have bit parts in several movies such as \"Two", "id": "12362318" }, { "contents": "Ann Rutherford\n\n\nLouis Mayer originally refused the loan because he considered the role too minor, but Rutherford passionately appealed to him to change his mind. In December 1939, while promoting the new movie, Rutherford visited six Confederate Army veterans at the Confederate Soldiers Home near Atlanta. One of the veterans gave Rutherford a rose corsage tied with Confederate colors. From 1937 until 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. Her first film in this series was \"You're Only Young Once\"", "id": "6472820" }, { "contents": "Gloria Stuart\n\n\nMan\" (1933), followed by roles in the Shirley Temple musicals \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936) and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938). She also starred as Queen Anne in the musical comedy \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939). Beginning in 1940, Stuart slowed her film career, instead performing in regional theater in New England. In 1945, following a tenure as a contract player for Twentieth Century Fox, Stuart abandoned her acting career and shifted to a career as an artist", "id": "3454792" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nand Judy Garland in the Andy Hardy film \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938). During the shoot, Turner completed her studies with an educational social worker, allowing her to graduate high school that year. The film was a box-office success, and her appearance in it as a flirtatious high school student convinced studio head Louis B. Mayer that Turner could be the next Jean Harlow, a sex symbol who had died six months before Turner's arrival at MGM. Mayer helped further Turner's career by giving her", "id": "11930007" }, { "contents": "Linda Darnell\n\n\nLinda Darnell (born Monetta Eloyse Darnell, October 16, 1923April 10, 1965) was an American film actress. Darnell progressed from modeling as a child to acting in theater and film. At the encouragement of her mother, she made her first film in 1939, and appeared in supporting roles in big-budget films for 20th Century Fox throughout the 1940s. She rose to fame with co-starring roles opposite Tyrone Power in adventure films, and established a main character career after her role in \"Forever Amber\" (", "id": "9752181" }, { "contents": "Marcia Mae Jones\n\n\nsigned her to co-star with Jackie Moran in a few rustic romances; when this series lapsed, both Jones and Moran joined Monogram's popular action-comedy series starring Frankie Darro. As a young adult, she continued to work in motion pictures, notably in \"Nine Girls\" (1944) and \"Arson, Inc.\" (1948). Like many familiar faces of the 1940s, she appeared on numerous television programs. In 1951 she appeared as comic foil to Buster Keaton in Keaton's filmed TV series.", "id": "5963847" }, { "contents": "Peggy Drake\n\n\nPeggy Drake (6 October 1922 – 19 September 2014), was an Austrian film and television actress. She primarily appeared in B-movies of the 1940s. Born Lieselotte Mayer in Vienna, Austria, she moved to the United States with her family at the age of three. Her acting career started with an uncredited role in the film \"Too Many Girls\" (1940). Her career was short-lived, appearing in five films between 1940 and 1942, most notably in the serial film \"King of the", "id": "8901594" }, { "contents": "Signe Hasso\n\n\nfilm in Sweden. In 1933, she made her first film, \"Tystnadens hus\", with German film director/cameraman Harry Hasso, whom she married the same year. They had a son by the time she was 19. They divorced in 1941. In 1940, she moved to the United States, where she signed a contract with RKO Pictures, who promoted her as \"the next Garbo\". With few RKO roles forthcoming, she turned to the stage to make a living. According to the Internet Broadway", "id": "19347089" }, { "contents": "Rita La Roy\n\n\nand the \"cobra dance\" in which her feet and legs were tied together under a stylized snakeskin so that she danced by undulating her torso.\" In 1929, she made her film debut in \"The Delightful Rogue\", starring opposite matinee idol Rod La Rocque. Over the next several years, working as part of the RKO Radio Pictures stable, she appeared in both starring and supporting roles. While her final significant role was in the 1940 comedy-mystery \"Hold That Woman!\", she had several small", "id": "13534727" }, { "contents": "Elizabeth Taylor\n\n\nto socially prominent American parents, Taylor moved with her family to Los Angeles in 1939. She made her acting debut in a minor role in the Universal Pictures film \"There's One Born Every Minute\" (1942) but the studio ended her contract after a year. She was then signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and became a popular teen star after appearing in \"National Velvet\" (1944). She transitioned to more mature roles in the 1950s, when she starred in the comedy \"Father of the", "id": "19979789" }, { "contents": "Karin Booth\n\n\nKarin Booth (born June Francis Hoffman, June 19, 1916 – July 27, 2003) was an American film and TV actress of the 1940s to 1960s. She was born June Francis Hoffman on June 19, 1916, in Minneapolis, Minnesota to Francis T. and Ebba V. Hoffman. She lived in Portland and Los Angeles, attending John Marshall High School. She began her career modeling and being a chorus girl in 1939 and was signed under contract to Paramount Pictures in 1941 under the name Katharine Booth. After changing her", "id": "1386964" }, { "contents": "Saranya Ponvannan\n\n\ndebut in Mani Ratnam's production \"Nayakan,\" as the female lead opposite Kamal Haasan in 1987. She made her first Telugu appearance in 1988 film \"Neerajanam;\" her Malayalam debut was a year later in the 1989 film \"Artham\" starring opposite Mamooty. In 1996 almost during the end of her career as a lead actress she debuted in Kannada cinema in \"Appaji\". After marriage in 1995, she semi retired from acting. In 2000 she appeared playing the lead role in the comedy television series, \"", "id": "2557700" }, { "contents": "Franciska Gaal\n\n\n\", opposite Fredric March. She followed this with the comedy \"The Girl Downstairs\" (1938) with Franchot Tone, a remake of her Austrian success \"Catherine the Last\". In 1939, Gaal co-starred with Bing Crosby in the musical \"Paris Honeymoon\". She returned to Hungary in 1940 because of her mother's illness and remained there for the duration of World War II. In 1946, she began work on a new film in Budapest the Soviet-backed \"Renee XIV\" but filming was", "id": "19308441" }, { "contents": "Jo Ann Sayers\n\n\nstudent production and invited her to Hollywood for a screen test. She was offered a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her first credited film role was in 1938. In 1940, she was selected for the titular role in the Broadway production of \"My Sister Eileen\", opposite Shirley Booth, who was two decades Sayers' senior, which opened on December 26, 1940. She remained in the Broadway cast until June 1942, when she left to marry Anthony A. Bliss (1913-1991), a New", "id": "6389492" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nstar Baby Rosalie Essex (June Preisser), but Mickey gets in a fight with Jeff. Mickey tells Judge Black that his parents' show flopped. The judge gives Mickey 30 days to pay damages. Don and Molly sing \"Where or When\" with an orchestra of children. Mickey has a date with Baby and dines in her house. Mickey wants Baby in the show, which needs $287. She offers to pay it. Mickey smokes a cigar and leaves sick. Mickey tells Patsy that Baby has to play", "id": "9219785" }, { "contents": "Chela Ruiz\n\n\nChela Ruiz (5 June 1921 - 1 December 1999) was an Argentine actress. Her career spanned radio, film, television and stage, and in 1997 the Argentine Association of Actors awarded her the prestigious Premio Podestá for her theatrical work. Ruiz made her professional debut on Radio Splendid, along with her sister Nora Cullen, working as an actress and reader. In the 1940s and 1950s she was known for her narration of radio plays by Nené Cascallar. She began appearing on stage in 1942. A film career followed later", "id": "10450238" }, { "contents": "Petula Clark\n\n\nher film career in the late 1960s, starring in two big musical films. In \"Finian's Rainbow\" (1968), she starred opposite Fred Astaire and she was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for her performance. With her role, she again made history by becoming Astaire's final on-screen dance partner. The following year she was cast with Peter O'Toole in \"Goodbye, Mr. Chips\" (1969), a musical adaptation of the classic James Hilton novella", "id": "19868394" }, { "contents": "Sara Haden\n\n\n\". Haden later became a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract player in the late 1930s and had smallish roles in many of the studio's films, most notably in the Andy Hardy series starring Mickey Rooney, cast as the spinsterish Aunt Milly Forrest. Haden made her last film, \"Andy Hardy Comes Home\", in 1958, but was active on television until a 1965 guest spot on \"Dr. Kildare\". She was most notable for her stern, humorless characterisations such as a truant officer in Shirley Temple's \"", "id": "16961173" }, { "contents": "Rafaela Ottiano\n\n\n's last film was the musical comedy \"I Married an Angel\" (1942), starring Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. During her career in film, she appeared in approximately 45 motion pictures, opposite such actors as Barbara Stanwyck, Conrad Nagel, Peter Lorre, Zasu Pitts, and Katharine Hepburn. Ottiano lived in the Times Square area during the Prohibition Era and never married. She died in 1942, in the Boston home of her late parents, of intestinal cancer at the age of 54. She is buried at", "id": "9444719" }, { "contents": "Doris Davenport\n\n\nDoris Davenport, also known as Doris Jordan (January 1, 1917 – June 18, 1980) was an American film actress during the 1930s and early 1940s. Davenport was born in Moline, Illinois, but raised in Hollywood, California. She started auditioning for acting roles, and performed in her first film in 1934, titled \"Kid Millions\". From 1934 to 1939, she appeared in only five films, supporting herself by working in New York City as a fashion model between films. However, when she auditioned", "id": "2801211" }, { "contents": "Patricia Dane\n\n\nPatricia Dane (born Thelma Pearl Pippins, August 4, 1919 – June 5, 1995) was an American film actress of the 1940s. Dane was born Thelma Pearl Pippins in Blountstown, Florida and was also known as Thelma Byrnes after her stepfather. She began her career designing clothes for a New York City dress firm and was signed to an MGM contract in 1941. Dane's earliest appearances were two uncredited roles in \"Ziegfeld Girl\" and \"I'll Wait for You\" (both 1941). She played the", "id": "18013995" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\na young girl. Her new contract called for a starting salary of $75 a week and scales up to $1000 a week for the seventh year. In November 1935, Parker purchased a new home in Beverly Hills, California. The following year she joined the ballet school of Dave Gould at MGM, along with Maureen O'Sullivan. By the fall of 1936, Parker was studying singing. She played Marian Hardy in the extremely popular Andy Hardy film series in the late 1930s and early 1940s. She was in the original", "id": "18919251" }, { "contents": "Rooney Mara\n\n\nwas always afraid that I might fail.\" Her first and only role in high school was Juliet in \"Romeo and Juliet\", which she got after being signed up to audition by a friend. Mara acted in a few student films while at NYU, and then began her career in acting, first auditioning at the age of nineteen. Mara first appeared as an extra in films which starred her sister, including a bit-part in the 2005 direct-to-video horror film \"\". She found work", "id": "18311311" }, { "contents": "Georgiana Young\n\n\nBelzer and Gladys Royal. Along with her half-sisters, she was raised Roman Catholic. Young's acting career was short-lived, though she appeared in three films. Her debut role was as Berta Hubbard, sister of Mabel Gardiner Hubbard, in Irving Cummings's 1939 biographical film \"The Story of Alexander Graham Bell\", opposite her sisters Loretta (as Mabel), Sally, and Polly Ann. She would later have bit parts in two other films: \"No, No, Nanette\" (1940)", "id": "6269969" }, { "contents": "Glikeriya Bogdanova-Chesnokova\n\n\nmedals for her service. Following the war, in 1946, Bogdanova-Chesnokova returned to the Leningrad State Theatre of Musical Comedy. In 1947, she received the Stalin Prize. In the mid 1950s, Bogdanova-Chesnokova performed during three circus seasons with the clown, The act involved acrobatic actions. In 1955, Bogdanova-Chesnokova made her first significant film appearance. She played Maria Mikhailovna in the comedy film \"Tamer of Tigers\". Generally, Bogdanova-Chesnokova was a character actress taking supporting roles. However, in", "id": "5458931" }, { "contents": "Judi West\n\n\nJudi West (born December 15, 1942) is an American actress, best known for her supporting role opposite Jack Lemmon in the 1966 comedy film \"The Fortune Cookie. Judi West acted in a few films in the 1960s and also appeared in television in the 1960s through the early 1980s. Her notable film appearances include: She had earlier worked on the Broadway stage including \"A Family Affair\" (1962) and \"She Loves Me\" (1963-1964). Married from 1971 to 1989 to actor John Rubinstein", "id": "5957659" }, { "contents": "Judy Holliday\n\n\nJudy Holliday (born Judith Tuvim, June 21, 1921 – June 7, 1965) was an American actress, comedian, and singer. She began her career as part of a nightclub act before working in Broadway plays and musicals. Her success in the 1946 stage production of \"Born Yesterday\" as Billie Dawn led to her being cast in the 1950 film version for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. She appeared in several films", "id": "15453399" }, { "contents": "Elena Lucena\n\n\nMaría Elena Lucena Arcuri (25 September 1914 – 7 October 2015) was an Argentine film actress of the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema (1940–60). She began her career in radio in the 1930s and reached her greatest success with the role of \"Chimbela\", which was later depicted in film, theater and television. Her extensive film career includes approximately 50 films, including notable performances in \"Chimbela\" (1939) and \"Una noche cualquiera\" (1951). During the 1940s she participated in films with comedians", "id": "16119436" }, { "contents": "Florence Nash\n\n\nLynch in \"Within the Law\". She was a noted theater actor and comedian in vaudeville until the 1930s (appearing in sketches including \"In 1999\"), when she moved to Hollywood to try her luck with films. Her most notable role was as \"Nancy Blake\" in the 1939 MGM blockbuster \"The Women\". She also was the author of a book of verse, \"June Dusk\", published in 1918. After her retirement from acting in 1939, she spent the next decade living comfortably in", "id": "6401074" }, { "contents": "Doris Nolan\n\n\nher jitters, the show was a success and Nolan got positive reviews. When Nolan left the play, Woods sent her back to Hollywood, getting her a contract with Universal Pictures. She continued to move back and forth between movies and theater throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Her most prominent film appearance was in the 1938 version of \"Holiday\", where she played alongside Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Her subsequent film roles went downhill, but she reinvigorated her Broadway career with an 18-month stint in \"The Doughgirls\",", "id": "14779965" }, { "contents": "Marjorie Stapp\n\n\nMarjorie Stapp (September 17, 1921 – June 2, 2014), was an American actress who was mainly in low-budget pictures. Stapp began her film career when she signed a contract with the film studio 20th Century-Fox in the 1940s. Her first screen appearance was in \"The Kid from Brooklyn\", a 1946 film starring Danny Kaye. This was followed by another minor appearance in \"Linda, Be Good\" (1947). Eventually, she landed a leading role in the Western movie \"The", "id": "3140505" }, { "contents": "Roshini (actress)\n\n\nRoshini is an Indian film actress who has worked in the Telugu and Tamil film industries. She is the younger sister actress Jyothika and half sister to Nagma. After getting a recommendation by her sister Nagma, Roshini made her acting debut in Selva's comedy film \"Sishya\", where she played the lead role alongside Karthik. She subsequently starred in \"Master\" (1997), opposite Chiranjeevi. Roshini was keen to accept performance-orientated roles and turned down several offers in late 1997 to be a part of films in", "id": "12724581" }, { "contents": "Lola Albright\n\n\nmotion picture debut with a small singing role in the 1947 musical comedy \"The Unfinished Dance\" and then appeared the following year in two Judy Garland movies: \"The Pirate\" and \"Easter Parade\". She first gained studio and public notice in the 1949 film noir production \"Champion\" with her portrayal of the wife of a manipulative boxing manager; she falls for a prizefighter played by Kirk Douglas. For the next several years, she appeared in secondary roles in over 20 films, including several B westerns. Among", "id": "18089616" }, { "contents": "Marika Rökk\n\n\nthe 1930s and 1940s. She had the technical skill and glamour to carry off the formulaic plots and dialogue and provide German audiences with a home grown star to rival the popular American actresses. \"Der Bettelstudent\" and \"Gasparone\", followed by \"Hello Janine!\" in 1939, all starred her together with Johannes Heesters and established them as the \"dream couple\" of the musical comedy genre. In her appearances she cultivated her \"magyar\" accent conveying a notion of \"paprika\" exoticism. Her films, which", "id": "9061566" }, { "contents": "Fay Wray\n\n\nShe continued to star in various films, including \"The Richest Girl in the World\", a second film with Joel McCrea, but by the early 1940s, her appearances became less frequent. She retired from acting in 1942 after her second marriage but due to financial exigencies soon resumed her acting career, and over the next three decades, Wray appeared in several films and also frequently on television. Wray was cast in the 1953-54 ABC situation comedy \"The Pride of the Family\" as Catherine Morrison. Paul Hartman", "id": "10781506" }, { "contents": "Margaret O'Brien\n\n\n(1944), opposite Judy Garland. As Tootie Smith, the feisty but fragile little sister of Judy Garland, she was a bright point in a very good film, especially in her musical numbers with Garland and during a Halloween sequence in which she confronts a grouchy neighbor. For her performance, she was awarded a special juvenile Oscar in 1944. Margaret and June Allyson were known as \"The Town Criers\" of MGM. \"We were always in competition: I wanted to cry better than June, and June wanted", "id": "7504217" }, { "contents": "Ann Sothern\n\n\nSothern appeared in two musical films in 1948, \"April Showers\" opposite Jack Carson and \"Words and Music\" starring an all-star cast of MGM actors, singers and dancers. In 1949, she appeared in the Academy Award-winning film \"A Letter to Three Wives\" for 20th Century Fox. Sothern received excellent reviews for her performance but the acclaim failed to stimulate her career, which had begun to wane in the late 1940s. In 1949, Sothern contracted hepatitis which she would battle for the next three", "id": "2026182" }, { "contents": "Jane Isbell\n\n\nWar soldier who once saved the life of Andrew Jackson. Clark Isbell's father was also a cousin of Alabama Governor William J. Samford. The Isbells moved to Los Angeles when Jane was an infant. The elder of two sisters, she began modeling and appearing as an extra in films when only four years old. In 1932, she made her first Mickey McGuire comedy starring Mickey Rooney and would eventually make five films in the Mickey McGuire series, similar to the Our Gang films. She grew up with child stars for playmates", "id": "12640286" }, { "contents": "Shirley Palmer (actress)\n\n\n1930 she appeared with Dorothy Sebastian and Neil Hamilton in \"Ladies Must Play\", her only film of that year. In 1932 she appeared in \"This Sporting Age\", and in 1933 she starred in probably her most recognizable role, starring opposite John Wayne in \"Somewhere in Sonora\". It would be her last credited role. She had two uncredited roles following that film, one the same year and the other in 1934, after which her career ended. She married once, to writer John Collier, and", "id": "3797930" }, { "contents": "Betty Grable\n\n\n(1930), starring Eddie Cantor. Although she received no on-screen credit for her performance, she led the film's opening musical number, entitled \"Cowboys\". In 1932, she signed a contract with RKO Radio Pictures, and she was assigned to a succession of acting, singing, and dancing classes at the studio's drama school. Her first film for the studio, \"Probation\" (1932), provided the 14-year-old Grable with her first credited screen role. Over the next few years", "id": "17559458" }, { "contents": "Erika Jayne\n\n\n, and pink.\" Soon after she gave birth to a son, Thomas Zizzo, Jr. After the couple divorced a few years later, she relocated to Los Angeles to pursue her dream of becoming a singer and performer. Early in her career, Girardi worked as a waitress to support herself between acting jobs. Girardi began her acting career in the early 1990s by appearing in small roles in several American television series and films. Her first on-screen appearance was a role as Suzanne Morton in the episode \"Prescription for", "id": "22006264" }, { "contents": "Thelma Scott\n\n\nThelma Scott (17 June 1913 – 23 November 2006) was an Australian character actress and television director whose 70-year career in theatre, radio, film and Australian television made her one of her country's most recognizable and beloved personalities. Having started her career in the early 1930s in theatre and film productions, she became one of the nation's biggest radio performers, during the 1940s featuring in productions such as \"Big Sister\" and \"Blue Hills\". She returned to made for TV films in the early late 1950s and", "id": "7852633" } ]
June Preisser ( June 26 , 1920 -- September 19 , 1984 ) was an American actress , briefly popular in musical films during the late 1930s and early 1940s , many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat . Born in New Orleans , [START_ENT] Louisiana [END_ENT] , Preisser was one of six children , and was an underweight baby . Her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age , in an attempt to build her strength . There she , and her sister Cherry , learnt acrobatics . Their mother was keen to have them follow a career in showbusiness , especially when their father died suddenly , leaving the family with few options to make a living . When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home , and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville , and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936 . The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States , and also performed in Europe , most notably for . Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage , and June was signed to a film contract by . Her first film Dancing Co-Ed ( 1939 ) provided only a small part , but her next film , Babes in Arms ( 1939 ) , gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland . She performed with Rooney and Garland again in Strike Up the Band ( 1940 ) , and with Rooney in two " Andy Hardy " films , Judge Hardy and Son ( 1939 ) and Andy Hardy 's Private Secretary ( 1941 ) . Gallant Sons ( 1940 ) placed her in a comedic murder mystery , and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in ( 1941 ) , and followed this with Sweater Girl ( 1942 ) , opposite Eddie Bracken . She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry , and the birth of a son , Ricky . By this time , MGM had little interest in promoting her , and she left to work for Monogram Pictures . She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years , and played the character " Dodie Rogers " in seven " high school " comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948 . Her final film was ( 1948 ) , and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of Annie Get Your Gun
7a97b3a2-8cc9-4ac3-ad63-81bac65f07ba_June_Preisse:1
[{"answer": "Louisiana", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "18130", "title": "Louisiana"}]}]
[ { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n, and June was signed to a film contract by MGM. Her first film, \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), provided only a small part, but her next film, \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. She performed with Rooney and Garland again in \"Strike Up the Band\" (1940), and with Rooney in two \"Andy Hardy\" films, \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939) and \"Andy Hardy", "id": "17067760" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nJune Preisser (June 26, 1920 – September 19, 1984) was an American actress, popular in musical films during the late 1930s and through the 1940s, many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat. Born in New Orleans, Preisser was one of six children. An underweight child, her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age, in an attempt to build her strength. There she, and her sister Cherry, learned acrobatics. Their mother was keen to have them follow a career", "id": "17067758" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n's Private Secretary\" (1941). \"Gallant Sons\" (1940) placed her in a comedic murder mystery, and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in \"Henry Aldrich for President\" (1941), and followed this with \"Sweater Girl\" (1942), opposite Eddie Bracken. She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry, and the birth of a son, Ricky. By this time, MGM had little interest in promoting her, and she left to work", "id": "17067761" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nfor Monogram Pictures. She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years, and played the character \"Dodie Rogers\" in seven \"high school\" comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948. Her final film was Music Man (1948), and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of \"Annie Get Your Gun\", she retired from acting. She divorced not long after, and taught dancing and acrobatics in Los Angeles, before moving with her son to Florida. They", "id": "17067762" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nin show business, especially when their father died suddenly, leaving the family with few options to make a living. When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home, and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville, and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936. The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States, and also performed in Europe, most notably for George VI of the United Kingdom. Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage", "id": "17067759" }, { "contents": "Melody Trail\n\n\nand Prejudice\" (1940). In 1939, she played the role of Carreen O'Hara, the sister of Scarlet O'Hara, in the film \"Gone with the Wind\". From 1937 to 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. She retired from films in 1950. Rutherford died on June 11, 2012 at her home in Beverly Hills, California. \"Melody Trail\" was filmed August 21–27, 1935. The film had an operating budget of $15,075", "id": "2111015" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nHardy Family movies as a literal girl-next-door to Rooney's character Andy Hardy, in \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938), although Hardy's love interest was played by Lana Turner. They teamed as lead characters for the first time in \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), ultimately appearing in five additional films, including Hardy films \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\" (1940) and \"Life Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland stated that she, Rooney, and other young", "id": "13593082" }, { "contents": "Annie Get Your Gun (film)\n\n\n, MGM's biggest musical comedy star, was originally cast as Annie Oakley. She recorded all her songs for the soundtrack and worked for two months under the direction of Busby Berkeley and dance director Robert Alton. Berkeley and Garland had worked together previously in the late 1930s and early 1940s in a successful series of backstage musicals teaming her with fellow juvenile star Mickey Rooney. Berkeley had been fired from the Garland/Rooney musical \"Girl Crazy\" in 1943 due to personality clashes with musical director Roger Edens and for driving Garland very", "id": "13779025" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nYear for her live recording \"Judy at Carnegie Hall\" (1961). Garland began performing in vaudeville as a child with her two older sisters, and was later signed to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a teenager. Although she appeared in more than two dozen films with MGM and received acclaim for many different roles, she is often best remembered for her portrayal of Dorothy Gale in \"The Wizard of Oz\" (1939). Garland was a frequent on-screen partner of both Mickey Rooney and Gene Kelly,", "id": "13593062" }, { "contents": "Louise LaPlanche\n\n\n, portraying a gypsy girl in \"The Hunchback of Notre Dame\" in 1923. Both LaPlanche began competing in California beauty pageants. In 1939, Louise LaPlanche was crowned Miss Catalina. Her Miss Catalina win led to a film contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). She appeared in the 1940 MGM musical film, \"Strike Up the Band\", which starred Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. LaPlanche later left MGM and signed on to Paramount Studios. She was cast in several Paramount films, including 1942's", "id": "3022959" }, { "contents": "Bonita Granville\n\n\nfilm success led to Granville reprising the role in three sequels from 1938 to 1939, including \"Nancy Drew... Reporter\" (1939). As a young adult, she was once again cast in supporting roles, often in prestigious films such as \"Now, Voyager\" (1942), as well as two Andy Hardy films with Mickey Rooney, \"Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble\" (1944) and \"Love Laughs at Andy Hardy\" (1946). She is also remembered for her starring role in the World", "id": "12873960" }, { "contents": "Eve Arden\n\n\nThis was followed by roles in the crime film \"The Forgotten Woman\" (1939), and the comedy \"At the Circus\" (1939), opposite Groucho Marx, a role that would require her to perform acrobatics. In 1940, she appeared opposite Clark Gable in \"Comrade X\", followed by the drama \"Manpower\" (1941), opposite Marlene Dietrich. She also appeared in a supporting part in the Red Skelton comedy \"Whistling in the Dark\" (1941), and the romantic comedy \"", "id": "10321268" }, { "contents": "Shirley Temple\n\n\nher departure from Twentieth Century-Fox, Shirley was signed by MGM for her comeback; the studio made plans to team her with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney for the Andy Hardy series. The idea was quickly abandoned. The next idea was teaming her with Garland and Rooney for the musical \"Babes on Broadway\". Fearing that either of the latter two could easily upstage Temple, MGM replaced her with Virginia Weidler. As a result, her only film for Metro was \"Kathleen\" in 1941, a story about an", "id": "7504264" }, { "contents": "Barbara Read\n\n\ncompany. When she failed to receive any roles because of her lack of experience, she joined the Laguna Beach Players theater, where she acted in a new play each month for two years. Her first film appearance was one of the three principal girls in the 1936 comedy film \"Three Smart Girls\", which also starred Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. From 1937 through 1939, Read appeared in nine films, most notably starring in \"The Spellbinder\", opposite Lee Tracy. From 1940 through 1948, she appeared in", "id": "5406875" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy\n\n\nLife Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland's character, Betsy Booth, is an aspiring singer and she sings in the first two of these films. However, although Garland songs were planned for the final film, they were eventually dropped. Unlike Garland-Rooney films outside of the \"Andy Hardy\" series, Rooney's Hardy character is not a musician, so Garland and Rooney do not perform together in the Hardy films. Rooney played the character continuously from age 16 to 25, when he appeared in", "id": "7714497" }, { "contents": "Fay Holden\n\n\nthe depression era. Eventually they left Vancouver and moved to Hollywood. Holden appeared in 46 motion pictures between 1935 and 1958, but is best known for her recurring role as Emily Hardy, mother of Mickey Rooney's character in the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" film series. The series was enormously popular in the late 1930s and early '40s, and Holden was in 15 of the 16 Hardy movies, surpassed only by Rooney, who was in all 16. Holden is also remembered for her performance as Hazel, the mother", "id": "15552902" }, { "contents": "Margaret Early\n\n\nBrent, Bette Davis, and Fay Bainter. She later became a freelance actress and found herself working in various roles at such studios as RKO, Warner Bros., and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her other screen roles include parts in \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939), \"Strike Up The Band\" (1940), \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" (1941), and \"Stage Door Canteen\" (1943). She made her last screen appearance in \"Cinderella Jones\" (1946)", "id": "11267109" }, { "contents": "Sheila Darcy\n\n\n1935 her career had taken off, and from then until 1941 she had roles in 41 films. In most of her early films, she played the heroine in B-movies, often Westerns. Darcy's best known roles were as the female lead in cliffhangers, such as the 1939 film \"Zorro's Fighting Legion\", in which she performed opposite Reed Hadley. She also played the Dragon Lady in the serial \"Terry and the Pirates\", released in 1940. In Westerns, she often played opposite popular cowboy", "id": "21067295" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nIn 1937, Rooney made his first film alongside Judy Garland with \"Thoroughbreds Don't Cry\". Garland and Rooney became close friends as they co-starred in future films and became a successful song-and-dance team. Audiences delighted in seeing the \"playful interactions between the two stars showcase a wonderful chemistry\". Along with three of the \"Andy Hardy\" films, where she portrayed a girl attracted to Andy, they appeared together in a string of successful musicals, including \"Babes in Arms\" (1939", "id": "5690267" }, { "contents": "Brenda Marshall\n\n\nArdis Ankerson (September 29, 1915 – July 30, 1992), known as Brenda Marshall, was a Filipino-born, American film actress. Marshall made her first film appearance in the 1939 \"Espionage Agent\". The following year, she played the leading lady to Errol Flynn in \"The Sea Hawk\". After divorcing actor Richard Gaines in 1940, she married William Holden in 1941, and her own career soon slowed. She starred opposite James Cagney in \"Captains of the Clouds\" (1942).", "id": "14392731" }, { "contents": "Julie Haydon\n\n\nmade by MGM. In 1932, she signed with RKO, and her first major role came that year in \"The Conquerors\", directed by William Wellman Her most notable performance came in 1935's \"The Scoundrel\" playing opposite Noël Coward, but, despite a new contract with MGM, only a few more films were to come in her short career, including \"A Family Affair\" (1937), the initial movie in the Andy Hardy series. Some have held that it was Haydon and not Fay Wray who", "id": "19690260" }, { "contents": "Jean Darling\n\n\nAssociation. She turned down an offer to appear alongside Mickey Rooney in one of the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" movies, and went on Broadway, making her debut in the musical \"Count Me In\" in 1942. Darling's stage career hit a real high when she landed the role of Carrie Pipperidge in the original Broadway production of \"Carousel\" in 1945. She appeared in 850 consecutive performances. Her role as Carrie Pipperidge helped her with parts for radio and TV in the 1950s. She hosted her own television show", "id": "1616169" }, { "contents": "List of Lana Turner performances\n\n\nLana Turner was an American actress who appeared in over fifty films during her career, which spanned four decades. Discovered in 1937 at age 16, she signed a contract with Warner Bros. and appeared in several films for the studio before signing a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The studio's co-founder, Louis B. Mayer, helped further her career by casting her in several youth-oriented comedies and musicals, including \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941),", "id": "7891475" }, { "contents": "Marguerite Chapman\n\n\ncontract to Warner Brothers in 1941, and then with Columbia from 1942 to 1948. She made her film debut in 1940, working for the next two years in small roles. In 1942, her big break came with Republic Pictures when she was cast in the leading female role in the twelve-part adventure film serial \"Spy Smasher\", a production that has been ranked among the best serials ever made. Chapman soon began receiving more leading roles and appeared opposite important stars such as Edward G. Robinson and George Sanders.", "id": "2722471" }, { "contents": "Jeanne Cagney\n\n\nRKO Pictures. However, she signed a long-term contract with Paramount Pictures. She appeared in 19 films between 1939 and 1965, including four films with her brother James: \"Yankee Doodle Dandy\" (1942), \"The Time of Your Life\" (1948), \"A Lion Is in the Streets\" (1953), and \"Man of a Thousand Faces\" (1957). Cagney gave a noted performance opposite Mickey Rooney in the film noir crime film \"Quicksand\" (1950). Cagney", "id": "6954933" }, { "contents": "Little Annie Rooney (1925 film)\n\n\nLittle Annie Rooney is a 1925 American silent comedy-drama film starring Mary Pickford and directed by William Beaudine. Pickford, one of the most successful actresses of the silent era, was best known throughout her career for her iconic portrayals of penniless young girls. After generating only modest box office revenue playing adults in her previous two films, Pickford wrote and produced \"Little Annie Rooney\" to cater to silent film audiences. Though she was 33 years old, Pickford played the title role, an Irish girl living in the slums", "id": "236551" }, { "contents": "Edith Barrett\n\n\n, she married leading man Vincent Price in 1938. The marriage ended in 1948. She and Price had one son, author/poet and environmental activist Vincent Barrett Price (born 1940). Her biggest Broadway success was as star of the now-obscure production \"Mrs. Moonlight\". In her first film, \"Ladies in Retirement\" (1941), she played one of the two half-witted half-sisters of Ida Lupino's homicidal character. Her best remembered movie role is possibly Mrs. Holland's mother-", "id": "18853813" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\nHardy film, \"A Family Affair\", in 1937. Mickey Rooney played Andy Hardy in the series, supported by Lewis Stone, Ann Rutherford, and Fay Holden. The movies were directed by George B. Seitz. Parker's character, Marion, appeared in most of the films, and her romances were a recurring feature of the series. Though she and the character she played were absent from the last two Andy Hardy films of the 1940s, Parker came out of retirement to play Marian Hardy in one more movie,", "id": "18919252" }, { "contents": "Nancy Walker\n\n\nrole provided Walker with her film debut when she signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to make a movie version, starring Lucille Ball (filmed in 1943). In 1943, she also appeared with Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in the second film version of \"Girl Crazy\". Her next film, \"Broadway Rhythm\", in which she had a featured musical number backed by Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra, \"Milkman, Keep Those Bottles Quiet\", ended Walker's contract with Metro. Her dry comic", "id": "9657966" }, { "contents": "List of Gloria Stuart performances\n\n\nstarred in two films opposite Shirley Temple: \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936), and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938), both for 20th Century Fox. She subsequently co-starred in \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939) opposite Don Ameche. Dissatisfied with her career in film, Stuart shifted her focus to stage acting. Between 1940 and 1942, Stuart appeared in numerous summer stock plays in New England, including a 1940 production of \"Our Town\" in which she starred alongside its playwright", "id": "19503931" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nBabes in Arms is the 1939 American film version of the 1937 Broadway musical of the same name. The film version stars Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland, and features Charles Winninger, Guy Kibbee, June Preisser, Grace Hayes, and Betty Jaynes. The film concerns a group of youngsters trying to put on a show to prove their vaudevillian parents wrong and make it to Broadway. The original Broadway script was significantly revamped, restructured, and rewritten to accommodate Hollywood's needs. In 1921, vaudeville performer Joe Moran (Winninger)", "id": "9219782" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nhim when he transferred to MGM in 1938. Turner attracted attention by playing the role of a murder victim in her first film, LeRoy's \"They Won't Forget\" (1937), and she later transitioned into featured roles, often appearing as an ingénue. During the early 1940s, Turner established herself as a leading actress and one of MGM's top performers, appearing in such films as the film noir \"Johnny Eager\" (1941); the musical \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941); the horror film", "id": "11929991" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nthe stature of most leading men. He appeared in a number of films, including \"Words and Music\" in 1948, which paired him for the last time with Garland on film (he appeared with her on one episode as a guest on \"The Judy Garland Show\"). He briefly starred in a CBS radio series, \"Shorty Bell\", in the summer of 1948, and reprised his role as \"Andy Hardy\", with most of the original cast, in a syndicated radio version of \"The", "id": "5690276" }, { "contents": "Donna Reed\n\n\nmany starlets at MGM, she played Mickey Rooney's love interest in an Andy Hardy film, in her case the hugely popular \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942). She was second billed in a children's film, \"Mokey\" (1942). Reed played a love interest in \"Calling Dr. Gillespie\" (1942) and \"Apache Trail\" (1942), then did a thriller with Edward Arnold, \"Eyes in the Night\" (1942), directed by Fred Zinnemann. Reed had", "id": "13840841" }, { "contents": "Evalyn Knapp\n\n\nHis Private Secretary\", a light comedy in which Wayne portrays a suit-and-tie wearing playboy determined to win her over. She also appeared in \"Corruption\" that year opposite Preston Foster. One of her better known film roles was opposite Ken Maynard in the 1934 film \"In Old Santa Fe\" featuring Gene Autry in his first screen appearance, in which he sang with a bluegrass band. She worked through 1941, but her career slowed afterward. In 1943, she played her last role, uncredited,", "id": "560741" }, { "contents": "Kathryn Grayson\n\n\nexercise. Within a year, Grayson had her first screen test. However, the studio executives were not satisfied, and she went through a further six months of lessons until she made her first film appearance in 1941's \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" as the character's secretary Kathryn Land. In the film, she takes part in three musical numbers. Two further films were planned for Grayson in 1941; \"White House Girl\", which was later made in 1948 with Durbin, and \"Very Warm for May", "id": "20045432" }, { "contents": "Susi Nicoletti\n\n\nSusi Nicoletti (3 September 1918 – 5 June 2005) was a Bavarian-born actress best remembered today for over 100 supporting roles mostly in comedy films. She was born as Susanne Emilie Luise Adele Habersack in Munich, but spent most of her childhood with her parents in Amsterdam. Back in Munich, she made her stage debut at age 13. Two years later she became a ballerina. In the early 1930s she turned to cabaret. In 1939, she was offered her first film role. In 1940 she moved to", "id": "6091110" }, { "contents": "Dorothy Morris\n\n\nShe did a screen test for the female lead in \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942), but lost to Donna Reed. Appearing in bit parts in several of the studio's more successful films, Morris was signed to a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract in 1941. For one of her early film roles, \"Cry 'Havoc'\" (1943), she affected a British accent. Her next picture was the well-received drama \"The Human Comedy\", which featured a star cast,", "id": "323808" }, { "contents": "The Courtship of Andy Hardy\n\n\nThe Courtship of Andy Hardy is a 1942 film, part of the Andy Hardy series. It gave an early role to Donna Reed although Mickey Rooney had lobbied for his then-wife Ava Gardner to have her part. Within a few months of the film's release, she filed for divorce. This was the 12th entry in the long-running \"Andy Hardy\" series of sixteen. When Carvel teenager and new tow truck-owner Andy Hardy is stopped by a policeman for driving without a license plate, a radio", "id": "20736523" }, { "contents": "Mae Busch\n\n\nMae Busch (18 June 1891 – 20 April 1946) was an Australian-born actress who worked in both silent and sound films in early Hollywood. In the latter part of her career she appeared in many Laurel and Hardy comedies, where she frequently played Hardy's shrewish wife. Mae Busch was born Annie May Busch in Melbourne, Victoria to popular Australian vaudeville performers Elizabeth Maria Lay and Frederick William Busch. Her mother had been active since 1883 under the stage names \"Dora Devere\" and then \"Dora Busch\";", "id": "10830566" }, { "contents": "Hannelore Schroth\n\n\ndebut at the age of nine in 1931's Max Ophüls' comedy \"Dann schon lieber Lebertran\" opposite her mother. Until age sixteen she attended drama school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Her early film successes include \"Spiel im Sommerwind\" (1938), \"Weisser Flieder\" (1939) and \"Kitty und die Weltkonferenz\" (1939) - the latter of which was her first leading role. During World War II, Hannelore Schroth continued performing in films. Unlike her father, Heinrich Schroth, who was by", "id": "16153872" }, { "contents": "Lupe Vélez\n\n\npopular actress, RKO Pictures did not renew her contract in 1934. Over the next few years, Vélez worked for various studio as a freelance actress; she also spent two years in England where she filmed \"The Morals of Marcus\" and \"Gypsy Melody\" (both 1936). She returned to Los Angeles the following year where she appeared in the final part of the Wheeler & Woolsey comedy \"High Flyers\" (1937). Vélez made her final appearance on Broadway in the 1938 musical \"You Never Know\"", "id": "20716058" }, { "contents": "Katharine Kavanaugh\n\n\nher biggest claims to fame was helping to create the Jones Family characters, who would appear in 17 low-budget films between 1936 and 1940. The first film in the series, \"Every Saturday Night\", was released in 1936, and Kavanaugh would also co-write \"Educating Father\", released later that same year. While her screenwriting career cooled in the late 1930s, she continued writing plays that were produced in the Los Angeles area until her death in 1942. She and her husband, Oliver Ziegfeld (", "id": "21036559" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\n, including \"The Wizard of Oz\" and \"Babes in Arms\". She was the fourth person to receive the award as well as only one of twelve in history to ever be presented with one. Garland starred in three films released in 1940: \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\", \"Strike Up the Band\", and \"Little Nellie Kelly\". In the last, she played her first adult role, a dual role of both mother and daughter. \"Little Nellie Kelly\" was purchased from George M.", "id": "13593089" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nliving on her own. In late 1949 Hardi and her husband moved to Jakarta. Two years later she made her feature film debut in a bit role in the Produksi Film Negara (PFN; State Film Corporation)'s \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". The following year she took a starring role in another PFN film, \"Si Pintjang\", portraying an old woman; as she was only twenty-four, she was artificially aged with make-up. That same year she appeared as the lead love interest in", "id": "15623084" }, { "contents": "Jane Frazee\n\n\nB film \"Melody and Moonlight\" (1940) for Republic Pictures. Shortly after the film's release she was signed by Universal Pictures and was featured in \"Buck Privates\", the high-grossing 1941 comedy/World War II film starring Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The strong impression she made in that film elevated her to leading-lady roles in Universal's popular \"B\" musicals, usually appearing opposite Robert Paige. She left Universal in late 1942, when she married actor-director Glenn Tryon, who", "id": "11708629" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\n\n\nAndy Hardy Meets Debutante is a 1940 American romantic comedy film directed by George B. Seitz. The film stars Lewis Stone, Mickey Rooney, Cecilia Parker, Fay Holden and Judy Garland. It is the ninth of the \"Andy Hardy\" full-length film series. Andy Hardy (Mickey Rooney) from Carvel becomes infatuated with a well-known young socialite, Daphne Fowler (Diana Lewis), from New York City. Even though he hasn’t met the woman in person, he drops her name to his friends and", "id": "11382757" }, { "contents": "Martha Vickers\n\n\nplayed minor roles in several films during the early 1940s, working first at Universal Studios and then at RKO Pictures. She next went to Warner Bros., where \"they gave her the star push, rearranging her surname to 'Vickers.'\" Her work there included the role of Carmen Sternwood, the promiscuous, drug-addicted younger sister of Lauren Bacall's character in \"The Big Sleep\" (1946). She also starred in a musical, \"The Time, the Place and the Girl\", followed by", "id": "721594" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nwas over, she was summoned back to work and ultimately performed two songs as a guest in the Rodgers and Hart biopic \"Words and Music\" (1948), which was her last appearance with Mickey Rooney. Despite the all-star cast, \"Words and Music\" barely broke even at the box office. Having regained her strength, as well as some needed weight during her suspension, Garland felt much better and in the fall of 1948, she returned to MGM to replace a pregnant June Allyson for the musical", "id": "13593101" }, { "contents": "Martha O'Driscoll\n\n\n's Dangerous\" (1937), she was not credited by name. In the Deanna Durbin vehicle \"Mad About Music\" (1937), she was billed as \"pretty girl.\" Her face appeared on such advertisements as Charm-Kurl Supreme Cold Wave and Max Factor Hollywood Face Powder. Universal lent O'Driscoll to MGM for parts in \"The Secret of Dr Kildare\" (1939) and \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1940), starring Mickey Rooney. RKO, however, gave O'Driscoll her first two starring", "id": "20196774" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nMarlia Hardi (also Marlia Hardy; 10 March 192718 June 1984) was an Indonesian film actress active from 1951 to 1983. Born in the Central Javan city of Magelang, she took to the stage in the 1940s before moving to Jakarta in 1949. Two years later she made her feature film debut in \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". Over the next two decades she appeared in over seventy films, became recognized for her depictions of mothers, and received the Citra Award for Best Supporting Actress. Despite her productiveness, however", "id": "15623082" }, { "contents": "Susan Peters\n\n\nLos Angeles. After completing filming of the comedy \"Andy Hardy's Double Life\" (1942) in which she had a lead role, Mervyn LeRoy cast Peters in the drama \"Random Harvest\", in which she portrayed a young woman who falls in love with her step-uncle. The film was one of the top 25 highest-earning films of the year, and Peters's performance garnered her critical acclaim, earning her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. The success of \"Random Harvest\" led", "id": "17519590" }, { "contents": "Paulette Goddard\n\n\nshe appeared as an uncredited extra in two films, the Laurel and Hardy short film \"Berth Marks\" (1929), and George Fitzmaurice's drama \"The Locked Door\" (1929). Following her divorce, she briefly visited Europe before returning to Hollywood in late 1930 with her mother. Her second attempt at acting was no more successful than the first, as she landed work only as an extra. In 1930, she signed her first film contract with producer Samuel Goldwyn to appear as a Goldwyn Girl in \"", "id": "3980436" }, { "contents": "Trixie Friganza\n\n\nTrixie Friganza (born Delia O'Callaghan; November 29, 1870 – February 27, 1955) began her career as an operetta soubrette, working her way from the chorus to starring in musical comedies to having her own feature act on the vaudeville circuit. She transitioned to film in the early 1920s mostly playing small characters that were quirky and comedic and retired from the stage in 1940 due to health concerns. She spent her last years teaching drama to young women in a convent school and when she died she left everything to the convent", "id": "13928014" }, { "contents": "Susan Hayward\n\n\nSusan Hayward (born Edythe Marrenner; June 30, 1917 – March 14, 1975) was an American actress and model. After working as a fashion model, Hayward traveled to Hollywood in 1937. She secured a film contract and played several small supporting roles over the next few years. By the late 1940s, the quality of her film roles had improved, and she achieved recognition for her dramatic abilities with the first of five Academy Award nominations for Best Actress for her performance as an alcoholic in \"Smash-Up,", "id": "14143916" }, { "contents": "Nella Walker\n\n\nyear to 1938, she had 23 film appearances. Her biggest film appearance during this period was in \"Young Dr. Kildare\" with Lionel Barrymore and Lew Ayres. Throughout the 1930s, her career was strong, and despite never being a premier star, she repeatedly had solid acting roles. She finished the decade strongly in 1939 with nine film roles, only three of which were uncredited. The 1940s mirrored her success of the previous decade in many ways, with appearances in 37 films from 1940 to 1947. Later in her", "id": "4686869" }, { "contents": "May Wallace\n\n\nMay Wallace (August 23, 1877 – December 11, 1938) was an American film actress. She appeared in 63 films between 1914 and 1939. Wallace was born in Russiaville, Indiana and died in Los Angeles, California, where she worked in Hollywood as a film actress. She often played supporting roles for producer Hal Roach in his Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang comedies, mostly in maternal roles. Wallace was married to Thomas W. Maddox until her death, they had one daughter and one son. She died of", "id": "9169980" }, { "contents": "Ora Carew\n\n\na film editor. Ora's birth year has been listed as 1893, on her death certificate and is also what her grave says, but Utah birth index and the 1900 census indicate 1891. She was educated by private tutors and at Roland Hall Seminary. After her father died on June 19, 1896, her mother moved with her three children to California. Her screen career began with MGM, following numerous engagements in vaudeville, musical comedy and stock. Some of her most notable films with MGM were \"Go West,", "id": "19207733" }, { "contents": "Eilene Janssen\n\n\nMary Eilene Janssen (born May 25, 1938), is a retired American film and television actress. Eilene Janssen was born in Los Angeles, California on May 25, 1938, to parents Henry Janssen and Mary Ellen Thompson. She began her film career as a child actress in the early 1940s. With her father being a longtime worker for Universal Studios, Eilene Janssen made her first screen appearance in the 1940 film \"Sandy Gets Her Man\". She continued to have bit parts in several movies such as \"Two", "id": "12362318" }, { "contents": "Ann Rutherford\n\n\nLouis Mayer originally refused the loan because he considered the role too minor, but Rutherford passionately appealed to him to change his mind. In December 1939, while promoting the new movie, Rutherford visited six Confederate Army veterans at the Confederate Soldiers Home near Atlanta. One of the veterans gave Rutherford a rose corsage tied with Confederate colors. From 1937 until 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. Her first film in this series was \"You're Only Young Once\"", "id": "6472820" }, { "contents": "Gloria Stuart\n\n\nMan\" (1933), followed by roles in the Shirley Temple musicals \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936) and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938). She also starred as Queen Anne in the musical comedy \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939). Beginning in 1940, Stuart slowed her film career, instead performing in regional theater in New England. In 1945, following a tenure as a contract player for Twentieth Century Fox, Stuart abandoned her acting career and shifted to a career as an artist", "id": "3454792" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nand Judy Garland in the Andy Hardy film \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938). During the shoot, Turner completed her studies with an educational social worker, allowing her to graduate high school that year. The film was a box-office success, and her appearance in it as a flirtatious high school student convinced studio head Louis B. Mayer that Turner could be the next Jean Harlow, a sex symbol who had died six months before Turner's arrival at MGM. Mayer helped further Turner's career by giving her", "id": "11930007" }, { "contents": "Linda Darnell\n\n\nLinda Darnell (born Monetta Eloyse Darnell, October 16, 1923April 10, 1965) was an American film actress. Darnell progressed from modeling as a child to acting in theater and film. At the encouragement of her mother, she made her first film in 1939, and appeared in supporting roles in big-budget films for 20th Century Fox throughout the 1940s. She rose to fame with co-starring roles opposite Tyrone Power in adventure films, and established a main character career after her role in \"Forever Amber\" (", "id": "9752181" }, { "contents": "Marcia Mae Jones\n\n\nsigned her to co-star with Jackie Moran in a few rustic romances; when this series lapsed, both Jones and Moran joined Monogram's popular action-comedy series starring Frankie Darro. As a young adult, she continued to work in motion pictures, notably in \"Nine Girls\" (1944) and \"Arson, Inc.\" (1948). Like many familiar faces of the 1940s, she appeared on numerous television programs. In 1951 she appeared as comic foil to Buster Keaton in Keaton's filmed TV series.", "id": "5963847" }, { "contents": "Peggy Drake\n\n\nPeggy Drake (6 October 1922 – 19 September 2014), was an Austrian film and television actress. She primarily appeared in B-movies of the 1940s. Born Lieselotte Mayer in Vienna, Austria, she moved to the United States with her family at the age of three. Her acting career started with an uncredited role in the film \"Too Many Girls\" (1940). Her career was short-lived, appearing in five films between 1940 and 1942, most notably in the serial film \"King of the", "id": "8901594" }, { "contents": "Signe Hasso\n\n\nfilm in Sweden. In 1933, she made her first film, \"Tystnadens hus\", with German film director/cameraman Harry Hasso, whom she married the same year. They had a son by the time she was 19. They divorced in 1941. In 1940, she moved to the United States, where she signed a contract with RKO Pictures, who promoted her as \"the next Garbo\". With few RKO roles forthcoming, she turned to the stage to make a living. According to the Internet Broadway", "id": "19347089" }, { "contents": "Rita La Roy\n\n\nand the \"cobra dance\" in which her feet and legs were tied together under a stylized snakeskin so that she danced by undulating her torso.\" In 1929, she made her film debut in \"The Delightful Rogue\", starring opposite matinee idol Rod La Rocque. Over the next several years, working as part of the RKO Radio Pictures stable, she appeared in both starring and supporting roles. While her final significant role was in the 1940 comedy-mystery \"Hold That Woman!\", she had several small", "id": "13534727" }, { "contents": "Elizabeth Taylor\n\n\nto socially prominent American parents, Taylor moved with her family to Los Angeles in 1939. She made her acting debut in a minor role in the Universal Pictures film \"There's One Born Every Minute\" (1942) but the studio ended her contract after a year. She was then signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and became a popular teen star after appearing in \"National Velvet\" (1944). She transitioned to more mature roles in the 1950s, when she starred in the comedy \"Father of the", "id": "19979789" }, { "contents": "Karin Booth\n\n\nKarin Booth (born June Francis Hoffman, June 19, 1916 – July 27, 2003) was an American film and TV actress of the 1940s to 1960s. She was born June Francis Hoffman on June 19, 1916, in Minneapolis, Minnesota to Francis T. and Ebba V. Hoffman. She lived in Portland and Los Angeles, attending John Marshall High School. She began her career modeling and being a chorus girl in 1939 and was signed under contract to Paramount Pictures in 1941 under the name Katharine Booth. After changing her", "id": "1386964" }, { "contents": "Saranya Ponvannan\n\n\ndebut in Mani Ratnam's production \"Nayakan,\" as the female lead opposite Kamal Haasan in 1987. She made her first Telugu appearance in 1988 film \"Neerajanam;\" her Malayalam debut was a year later in the 1989 film \"Artham\" starring opposite Mamooty. In 1996 almost during the end of her career as a lead actress she debuted in Kannada cinema in \"Appaji\". After marriage in 1995, she semi retired from acting. In 2000 she appeared playing the lead role in the comedy television series, \"", "id": "2557700" }, { "contents": "Franciska Gaal\n\n\n\", opposite Fredric March. She followed this with the comedy \"The Girl Downstairs\" (1938) with Franchot Tone, a remake of her Austrian success \"Catherine the Last\". In 1939, Gaal co-starred with Bing Crosby in the musical \"Paris Honeymoon\". She returned to Hungary in 1940 because of her mother's illness and remained there for the duration of World War II. In 1946, she began work on a new film in Budapest the Soviet-backed \"Renee XIV\" but filming was", "id": "19308441" }, { "contents": "Jo Ann Sayers\n\n\nstudent production and invited her to Hollywood for a screen test. She was offered a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her first credited film role was in 1938. In 1940, she was selected for the titular role in the Broadway production of \"My Sister Eileen\", opposite Shirley Booth, who was two decades Sayers' senior, which opened on December 26, 1940. She remained in the Broadway cast until June 1942, when she left to marry Anthony A. Bliss (1913-1991), a New", "id": "6389492" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nstar Baby Rosalie Essex (June Preisser), but Mickey gets in a fight with Jeff. Mickey tells Judge Black that his parents' show flopped. The judge gives Mickey 30 days to pay damages. Don and Molly sing \"Where or When\" with an orchestra of children. Mickey has a date with Baby and dines in her house. Mickey wants Baby in the show, which needs $287. She offers to pay it. Mickey smokes a cigar and leaves sick. Mickey tells Patsy that Baby has to play", "id": "9219785" }, { "contents": "Chela Ruiz\n\n\nChela Ruiz (5 June 1921 - 1 December 1999) was an Argentine actress. Her career spanned radio, film, television and stage, and in 1997 the Argentine Association of Actors awarded her the prestigious Premio Podestá for her theatrical work. Ruiz made her professional debut on Radio Splendid, along with her sister Nora Cullen, working as an actress and reader. In the 1940s and 1950s she was known for her narration of radio plays by Nené Cascallar. She began appearing on stage in 1942. A film career followed later", "id": "10450238" }, { "contents": "Petula Clark\n\n\nher film career in the late 1960s, starring in two big musical films. In \"Finian's Rainbow\" (1968), she starred opposite Fred Astaire and she was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for her performance. With her role, she again made history by becoming Astaire's final on-screen dance partner. The following year she was cast with Peter O'Toole in \"Goodbye, Mr. Chips\" (1969), a musical adaptation of the classic James Hilton novella", "id": "19868394" }, { "contents": "Sara Haden\n\n\n\". Haden later became a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract player in the late 1930s and had smallish roles in many of the studio's films, most notably in the Andy Hardy series starring Mickey Rooney, cast as the spinsterish Aunt Milly Forrest. Haden made her last film, \"Andy Hardy Comes Home\", in 1958, but was active on television until a 1965 guest spot on \"Dr. Kildare\". She was most notable for her stern, humorless characterisations such as a truant officer in Shirley Temple's \"", "id": "16961173" }, { "contents": "Rafaela Ottiano\n\n\n's last film was the musical comedy \"I Married an Angel\" (1942), starring Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. During her career in film, she appeared in approximately 45 motion pictures, opposite such actors as Barbara Stanwyck, Conrad Nagel, Peter Lorre, Zasu Pitts, and Katharine Hepburn. Ottiano lived in the Times Square area during the Prohibition Era and never married. She died in 1942, in the Boston home of her late parents, of intestinal cancer at the age of 54. She is buried at", "id": "9444719" }, { "contents": "Doris Davenport\n\n\nDoris Davenport, also known as Doris Jordan (January 1, 1917 – June 18, 1980) was an American film actress during the 1930s and early 1940s. Davenport was born in Moline, Illinois, but raised in Hollywood, California. She started auditioning for acting roles, and performed in her first film in 1934, titled \"Kid Millions\". From 1934 to 1939, she appeared in only five films, supporting herself by working in New York City as a fashion model between films. However, when she auditioned", "id": "2801211" }, { "contents": "Patricia Dane\n\n\nPatricia Dane (born Thelma Pearl Pippins, August 4, 1919 – June 5, 1995) was an American film actress of the 1940s. Dane was born Thelma Pearl Pippins in Blountstown, Florida and was also known as Thelma Byrnes after her stepfather. She began her career designing clothes for a New York City dress firm and was signed to an MGM contract in 1941. Dane's earliest appearances were two uncredited roles in \"Ziegfeld Girl\" and \"I'll Wait for You\" (both 1941). She played the", "id": "18013995" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\na young girl. Her new contract called for a starting salary of $75 a week and scales up to $1000 a week for the seventh year. In November 1935, Parker purchased a new home in Beverly Hills, California. The following year she joined the ballet school of Dave Gould at MGM, along with Maureen O'Sullivan. By the fall of 1936, Parker was studying singing. She played Marian Hardy in the extremely popular Andy Hardy film series in the late 1930s and early 1940s. She was in the original", "id": "18919251" }, { "contents": "Rooney Mara\n\n\nwas always afraid that I might fail.\" Her first and only role in high school was Juliet in \"Romeo and Juliet\", which she got after being signed up to audition by a friend. Mara acted in a few student films while at NYU, and then began her career in acting, first auditioning at the age of nineteen. Mara first appeared as an extra in films which starred her sister, including a bit-part in the 2005 direct-to-video horror film \"\". She found work", "id": "18311311" }, { "contents": "Georgiana Young\n\n\nBelzer and Gladys Royal. Along with her half-sisters, she was raised Roman Catholic. Young's acting career was short-lived, though she appeared in three films. Her debut role was as Berta Hubbard, sister of Mabel Gardiner Hubbard, in Irving Cummings's 1939 biographical film \"The Story of Alexander Graham Bell\", opposite her sisters Loretta (as Mabel), Sally, and Polly Ann. She would later have bit parts in two other films: \"No, No, Nanette\" (1940)", "id": "6269969" }, { "contents": "Glikeriya Bogdanova-Chesnokova\n\n\nmedals for her service. Following the war, in 1946, Bogdanova-Chesnokova returned to the Leningrad State Theatre of Musical Comedy. In 1947, she received the Stalin Prize. In the mid 1950s, Bogdanova-Chesnokova performed during three circus seasons with the clown, The act involved acrobatic actions. In 1955, Bogdanova-Chesnokova made her first significant film appearance. She played Maria Mikhailovna in the comedy film \"Tamer of Tigers\". Generally, Bogdanova-Chesnokova was a character actress taking supporting roles. However, in", "id": "5458931" }, { "contents": "Judi West\n\n\nJudi West (born December 15, 1942) is an American actress, best known for her supporting role opposite Jack Lemmon in the 1966 comedy film \"The Fortune Cookie. Judi West acted in a few films in the 1960s and also appeared in television in the 1960s through the early 1980s. Her notable film appearances include: She had earlier worked on the Broadway stage including \"A Family Affair\" (1962) and \"She Loves Me\" (1963-1964). Married from 1971 to 1989 to actor John Rubinstein", "id": "5957659" }, { "contents": "Judy Holliday\n\n\nJudy Holliday (born Judith Tuvim, June 21, 1921 – June 7, 1965) was an American actress, comedian, and singer. She began her career as part of a nightclub act before working in Broadway plays and musicals. Her success in the 1946 stage production of \"Born Yesterday\" as Billie Dawn led to her being cast in the 1950 film version for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. She appeared in several films", "id": "15453399" }, { "contents": "Elena Lucena\n\n\nMaría Elena Lucena Arcuri (25 September 1914 – 7 October 2015) was an Argentine film actress of the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema (1940–60). She began her career in radio in the 1930s and reached her greatest success with the role of \"Chimbela\", which was later depicted in film, theater and television. Her extensive film career includes approximately 50 films, including notable performances in \"Chimbela\" (1939) and \"Una noche cualquiera\" (1951). During the 1940s she participated in films with comedians", "id": "16119436" }, { "contents": "Florence Nash\n\n\nLynch in \"Within the Law\". She was a noted theater actor and comedian in vaudeville until the 1930s (appearing in sketches including \"In 1999\"), when she moved to Hollywood to try her luck with films. Her most notable role was as \"Nancy Blake\" in the 1939 MGM blockbuster \"The Women\". She also was the author of a book of verse, \"June Dusk\", published in 1918. After her retirement from acting in 1939, she spent the next decade living comfortably in", "id": "6401074" }, { "contents": "Doris Nolan\n\n\nher jitters, the show was a success and Nolan got positive reviews. When Nolan left the play, Woods sent her back to Hollywood, getting her a contract with Universal Pictures. She continued to move back and forth between movies and theater throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Her most prominent film appearance was in the 1938 version of \"Holiday\", where she played alongside Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Her subsequent film roles went downhill, but she reinvigorated her Broadway career with an 18-month stint in \"The Doughgirls\",", "id": "14779965" }, { "contents": "Marjorie Stapp\n\n\nMarjorie Stapp (September 17, 1921 – June 2, 2014), was an American actress who was mainly in low-budget pictures. Stapp began her film career when she signed a contract with the film studio 20th Century-Fox in the 1940s. Her first screen appearance was in \"The Kid from Brooklyn\", a 1946 film starring Danny Kaye. This was followed by another minor appearance in \"Linda, Be Good\" (1947). Eventually, she landed a leading role in the Western movie \"The", "id": "3140505" }, { "contents": "Roshini (actress)\n\n\nRoshini is an Indian film actress who has worked in the Telugu and Tamil film industries. She is the younger sister actress Jyothika and half sister to Nagma. After getting a recommendation by her sister Nagma, Roshini made her acting debut in Selva's comedy film \"Sishya\", where she played the lead role alongside Karthik. She subsequently starred in \"Master\" (1997), opposite Chiranjeevi. Roshini was keen to accept performance-orientated roles and turned down several offers in late 1997 to be a part of films in", "id": "12724581" }, { "contents": "Lola Albright\n\n\nmotion picture debut with a small singing role in the 1947 musical comedy \"The Unfinished Dance\" and then appeared the following year in two Judy Garland movies: \"The Pirate\" and \"Easter Parade\". She first gained studio and public notice in the 1949 film noir production \"Champion\" with her portrayal of the wife of a manipulative boxing manager; she falls for a prizefighter played by Kirk Douglas. For the next several years, she appeared in secondary roles in over 20 films, including several B westerns. Among", "id": "18089616" }, { "contents": "Marika Rökk\n\n\nthe 1930s and 1940s. She had the technical skill and glamour to carry off the formulaic plots and dialogue and provide German audiences with a home grown star to rival the popular American actresses. \"Der Bettelstudent\" and \"Gasparone\", followed by \"Hello Janine!\" in 1939, all starred her together with Johannes Heesters and established them as the \"dream couple\" of the musical comedy genre. In her appearances she cultivated her \"magyar\" accent conveying a notion of \"paprika\" exoticism. Her films, which", "id": "9061566" }, { "contents": "Fay Wray\n\n\nShe continued to star in various films, including \"The Richest Girl in the World\", a second film with Joel McCrea, but by the early 1940s, her appearances became less frequent. She retired from acting in 1942 after her second marriage but due to financial exigencies soon resumed her acting career, and over the next three decades, Wray appeared in several films and also frequently on television. Wray was cast in the 1953-54 ABC situation comedy \"The Pride of the Family\" as Catherine Morrison. Paul Hartman", "id": "10781506" }, { "contents": "Margaret O'Brien\n\n\n(1944), opposite Judy Garland. As Tootie Smith, the feisty but fragile little sister of Judy Garland, she was a bright point in a very good film, especially in her musical numbers with Garland and during a Halloween sequence in which she confronts a grouchy neighbor. For her performance, she was awarded a special juvenile Oscar in 1944. Margaret and June Allyson were known as \"The Town Criers\" of MGM. \"We were always in competition: I wanted to cry better than June, and June wanted", "id": "7504217" }, { "contents": "Ann Sothern\n\n\nSothern appeared in two musical films in 1948, \"April Showers\" opposite Jack Carson and \"Words and Music\" starring an all-star cast of MGM actors, singers and dancers. In 1949, she appeared in the Academy Award-winning film \"A Letter to Three Wives\" for 20th Century Fox. Sothern received excellent reviews for her performance but the acclaim failed to stimulate her career, which had begun to wane in the late 1940s. In 1949, Sothern contracted hepatitis which she would battle for the next three", "id": "2026182" }, { "contents": "Jane Isbell\n\n\nWar soldier who once saved the life of Andrew Jackson. Clark Isbell's father was also a cousin of Alabama Governor William J. Samford. The Isbells moved to Los Angeles when Jane was an infant. The elder of two sisters, she began modeling and appearing as an extra in films when only four years old. In 1932, she made her first Mickey McGuire comedy starring Mickey Rooney and would eventually make five films in the Mickey McGuire series, similar to the Our Gang films. She grew up with child stars for playmates", "id": "12640286" }, { "contents": "Shirley Palmer (actress)\n\n\n1930 she appeared with Dorothy Sebastian and Neil Hamilton in \"Ladies Must Play\", her only film of that year. In 1932 she appeared in \"This Sporting Age\", and in 1933 she starred in probably her most recognizable role, starring opposite John Wayne in \"Somewhere in Sonora\". It would be her last credited role. She had two uncredited roles following that film, one the same year and the other in 1934, after which her career ended. She married once, to writer John Collier, and", "id": "3797930" }, { "contents": "Betty Grable\n\n\n(1930), starring Eddie Cantor. Although she received no on-screen credit for her performance, she led the film's opening musical number, entitled \"Cowboys\". In 1932, she signed a contract with RKO Radio Pictures, and she was assigned to a succession of acting, singing, and dancing classes at the studio's drama school. Her first film for the studio, \"Probation\" (1932), provided the 14-year-old Grable with her first credited screen role. Over the next few years", "id": "17559458" }, { "contents": "Erika Jayne\n\n\n, and pink.\" Soon after she gave birth to a son, Thomas Zizzo, Jr. After the couple divorced a few years later, she relocated to Los Angeles to pursue her dream of becoming a singer and performer. Early in her career, Girardi worked as a waitress to support herself between acting jobs. Girardi began her acting career in the early 1990s by appearing in small roles in several American television series and films. Her first on-screen appearance was a role as Suzanne Morton in the episode \"Prescription for", "id": "22006264" }, { "contents": "Thelma Scott\n\n\nThelma Scott (17 June 1913 – 23 November 2006) was an Australian character actress and television director whose 70-year career in theatre, radio, film and Australian television made her one of her country's most recognizable and beloved personalities. Having started her career in the early 1930s in theatre and film productions, she became one of the nation's biggest radio performers, during the 1940s featuring in productions such as \"Big Sister\" and \"Blue Hills\". She returned to made for TV films in the early late 1950s and", "id": "7852633" } ]
June Preisser ( June 26 , 1920 -- September 19 , 1984 ) was an American actress , briefly popular in musical films during the late 1930s and early 1940s , many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat . Born in New Orleans , Louisiana , Preisser was one of six children , and was an underweight baby . Her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age , in an attempt to build her strength . There she , and her sister Cherry , learnt acrobatics . Their mother was keen to have them follow a career in showbusiness , especially when their father died suddenly , leaving the family with few options to make a living . When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home , and his interest in them eventually led to them working in [START_ENT] vaudeville [END_ENT] , and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936 . The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States , and also performed in Europe , most notably for . Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage , and June was signed to a film contract by . Her first film Dancing Co-Ed ( 1939 ) provided only a small part , but her next film , Babes in Arms ( 1939 ) , gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland . She performed with Rooney and Garland again in Strike Up the Band ( 1940 ) , and with Rooney in two " Andy Hardy " films , Judge Hardy and Son ( 1939 ) and Andy Hardy 's Private Secretary ( 1941 ) . Gallant Sons ( 1940 ) placed her in a comedic murder mystery , and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in ( 1941 ) , and followed this with Sweater Girl ( 1942 ) , opposite Eddie Bracken . She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry , and the birth of a son , Ricky . By this time , MGM had little interest in promoting her , and she left to work for Monogram Pictures . She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years , and played the character " Dodie Rogers " in seven " high school " comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948 . Her final film was ( 1948 ) , and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of Annie Get Your Gun
78faa156-15c1-4c2d-8321-c4539a9631e2_June_Preisse:2
[{"answer": "Vaudeville", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "48235", "title": "Vaudeville"}]}]
[ { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n, and June was signed to a film contract by MGM. Her first film, \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), provided only a small part, but her next film, \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. She performed with Rooney and Garland again in \"Strike Up the Band\" (1940), and with Rooney in two \"Andy Hardy\" films, \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939) and \"Andy Hardy", "id": "17067760" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nJune Preisser (June 26, 1920 – September 19, 1984) was an American actress, popular in musical films during the late 1930s and through the 1940s, many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat. Born in New Orleans, Preisser was one of six children. An underweight child, her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age, in an attempt to build her strength. There she, and her sister Cherry, learned acrobatics. Their mother was keen to have them follow a career", "id": "17067758" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n's Private Secretary\" (1941). \"Gallant Sons\" (1940) placed her in a comedic murder mystery, and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in \"Henry Aldrich for President\" (1941), and followed this with \"Sweater Girl\" (1942), opposite Eddie Bracken. She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry, and the birth of a son, Ricky. By this time, MGM had little interest in promoting her, and she left to work", "id": "17067761" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nfor Monogram Pictures. She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years, and played the character \"Dodie Rogers\" in seven \"high school\" comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948. Her final film was Music Man (1948), and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of \"Annie Get Your Gun\", she retired from acting. She divorced not long after, and taught dancing and acrobatics in Los Angeles, before moving with her son to Florida. They", "id": "17067762" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nin show business, especially when their father died suddenly, leaving the family with few options to make a living. When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home, and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville, and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936. The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States, and also performed in Europe, most notably for George VI of the United Kingdom. Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage", "id": "17067759" }, { "contents": "Melody Trail\n\n\nand Prejudice\" (1940). In 1939, she played the role of Carreen O'Hara, the sister of Scarlet O'Hara, in the film \"Gone with the Wind\". From 1937 to 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. She retired from films in 1950. Rutherford died on June 11, 2012 at her home in Beverly Hills, California. \"Melody Trail\" was filmed August 21–27, 1935. The film had an operating budget of $15,075", "id": "2111015" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nHardy Family movies as a literal girl-next-door to Rooney's character Andy Hardy, in \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938), although Hardy's love interest was played by Lana Turner. They teamed as lead characters for the first time in \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), ultimately appearing in five additional films, including Hardy films \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\" (1940) and \"Life Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland stated that she, Rooney, and other young", "id": "13593082" }, { "contents": "Annie Get Your Gun (film)\n\n\n, MGM's biggest musical comedy star, was originally cast as Annie Oakley. She recorded all her songs for the soundtrack and worked for two months under the direction of Busby Berkeley and dance director Robert Alton. Berkeley and Garland had worked together previously in the late 1930s and early 1940s in a successful series of backstage musicals teaming her with fellow juvenile star Mickey Rooney. Berkeley had been fired from the Garland/Rooney musical \"Girl Crazy\" in 1943 due to personality clashes with musical director Roger Edens and for driving Garland very", "id": "13779025" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nYear for her live recording \"Judy at Carnegie Hall\" (1961). Garland began performing in vaudeville as a child with her two older sisters, and was later signed to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a teenager. Although she appeared in more than two dozen films with MGM and received acclaim for many different roles, she is often best remembered for her portrayal of Dorothy Gale in \"The Wizard of Oz\" (1939). Garland was a frequent on-screen partner of both Mickey Rooney and Gene Kelly,", "id": "13593062" }, { "contents": "Louise LaPlanche\n\n\n, portraying a gypsy girl in \"The Hunchback of Notre Dame\" in 1923. Both LaPlanche began competing in California beauty pageants. In 1939, Louise LaPlanche was crowned Miss Catalina. Her Miss Catalina win led to a film contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). She appeared in the 1940 MGM musical film, \"Strike Up the Band\", which starred Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. LaPlanche later left MGM and signed on to Paramount Studios. She was cast in several Paramount films, including 1942's", "id": "3022959" }, { "contents": "Bonita Granville\n\n\nfilm success led to Granville reprising the role in three sequels from 1938 to 1939, including \"Nancy Drew... Reporter\" (1939). As a young adult, she was once again cast in supporting roles, often in prestigious films such as \"Now, Voyager\" (1942), as well as two Andy Hardy films with Mickey Rooney, \"Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble\" (1944) and \"Love Laughs at Andy Hardy\" (1946). She is also remembered for her starring role in the World", "id": "12873960" }, { "contents": "Eve Arden\n\n\nThis was followed by roles in the crime film \"The Forgotten Woman\" (1939), and the comedy \"At the Circus\" (1939), opposite Groucho Marx, a role that would require her to perform acrobatics. In 1940, she appeared opposite Clark Gable in \"Comrade X\", followed by the drama \"Manpower\" (1941), opposite Marlene Dietrich. She also appeared in a supporting part in the Red Skelton comedy \"Whistling in the Dark\" (1941), and the romantic comedy \"", "id": "10321268" }, { "contents": "Shirley Temple\n\n\nher departure from Twentieth Century-Fox, Shirley was signed by MGM for her comeback; the studio made plans to team her with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney for the Andy Hardy series. The idea was quickly abandoned. The next idea was teaming her with Garland and Rooney for the musical \"Babes on Broadway\". Fearing that either of the latter two could easily upstage Temple, MGM replaced her with Virginia Weidler. As a result, her only film for Metro was \"Kathleen\" in 1941, a story about an", "id": "7504264" }, { "contents": "Barbara Read\n\n\ncompany. When she failed to receive any roles because of her lack of experience, she joined the Laguna Beach Players theater, where she acted in a new play each month for two years. Her first film appearance was one of the three principal girls in the 1936 comedy film \"Three Smart Girls\", which also starred Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. From 1937 through 1939, Read appeared in nine films, most notably starring in \"The Spellbinder\", opposite Lee Tracy. From 1940 through 1948, she appeared in", "id": "5406875" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy\n\n\nLife Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland's character, Betsy Booth, is an aspiring singer and she sings in the first two of these films. However, although Garland songs were planned for the final film, they were eventually dropped. Unlike Garland-Rooney films outside of the \"Andy Hardy\" series, Rooney's Hardy character is not a musician, so Garland and Rooney do not perform together in the Hardy films. Rooney played the character continuously from age 16 to 25, when he appeared in", "id": "7714497" }, { "contents": "Fay Holden\n\n\nthe depression era. Eventually they left Vancouver and moved to Hollywood. Holden appeared in 46 motion pictures between 1935 and 1958, but is best known for her recurring role as Emily Hardy, mother of Mickey Rooney's character in the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" film series. The series was enormously popular in the late 1930s and early '40s, and Holden was in 15 of the 16 Hardy movies, surpassed only by Rooney, who was in all 16. Holden is also remembered for her performance as Hazel, the mother", "id": "15552902" }, { "contents": "Margaret Early\n\n\nBrent, Bette Davis, and Fay Bainter. She later became a freelance actress and found herself working in various roles at such studios as RKO, Warner Bros., and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her other screen roles include parts in \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939), \"Strike Up The Band\" (1940), \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" (1941), and \"Stage Door Canteen\" (1943). She made her last screen appearance in \"Cinderella Jones\" (1946)", "id": "11267109" }, { "contents": "Sheila Darcy\n\n\n1935 her career had taken off, and from then until 1941 she had roles in 41 films. In most of her early films, she played the heroine in B-movies, often Westerns. Darcy's best known roles were as the female lead in cliffhangers, such as the 1939 film \"Zorro's Fighting Legion\", in which she performed opposite Reed Hadley. She also played the Dragon Lady in the serial \"Terry and the Pirates\", released in 1940. In Westerns, she often played opposite popular cowboy", "id": "21067295" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nIn 1937, Rooney made his first film alongside Judy Garland with \"Thoroughbreds Don't Cry\". Garland and Rooney became close friends as they co-starred in future films and became a successful song-and-dance team. Audiences delighted in seeing the \"playful interactions between the two stars showcase a wonderful chemistry\". Along with three of the \"Andy Hardy\" films, where she portrayed a girl attracted to Andy, they appeared together in a string of successful musicals, including \"Babes in Arms\" (1939", "id": "5690267" }, { "contents": "Brenda Marshall\n\n\nArdis Ankerson (September 29, 1915 – July 30, 1992), known as Brenda Marshall, was a Filipino-born, American film actress. Marshall made her first film appearance in the 1939 \"Espionage Agent\". The following year, she played the leading lady to Errol Flynn in \"The Sea Hawk\". After divorcing actor Richard Gaines in 1940, she married William Holden in 1941, and her own career soon slowed. She starred opposite James Cagney in \"Captains of the Clouds\" (1942).", "id": "14392731" }, { "contents": "Julie Haydon\n\n\nmade by MGM. In 1932, she signed with RKO, and her first major role came that year in \"The Conquerors\", directed by William Wellman Her most notable performance came in 1935's \"The Scoundrel\" playing opposite Noël Coward, but, despite a new contract with MGM, only a few more films were to come in her short career, including \"A Family Affair\" (1937), the initial movie in the Andy Hardy series. Some have held that it was Haydon and not Fay Wray who", "id": "19690260" }, { "contents": "Jean Darling\n\n\nAssociation. She turned down an offer to appear alongside Mickey Rooney in one of the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" movies, and went on Broadway, making her debut in the musical \"Count Me In\" in 1942. Darling's stage career hit a real high when she landed the role of Carrie Pipperidge in the original Broadway production of \"Carousel\" in 1945. She appeared in 850 consecutive performances. Her role as Carrie Pipperidge helped her with parts for radio and TV in the 1950s. She hosted her own television show", "id": "1616169" }, { "contents": "List of Lana Turner performances\n\n\nLana Turner was an American actress who appeared in over fifty films during her career, which spanned four decades. Discovered in 1937 at age 16, she signed a contract with Warner Bros. and appeared in several films for the studio before signing a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The studio's co-founder, Louis B. Mayer, helped further her career by casting her in several youth-oriented comedies and musicals, including \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941),", "id": "7891475" }, { "contents": "Marguerite Chapman\n\n\ncontract to Warner Brothers in 1941, and then with Columbia from 1942 to 1948. She made her film debut in 1940, working for the next two years in small roles. In 1942, her big break came with Republic Pictures when she was cast in the leading female role in the twelve-part adventure film serial \"Spy Smasher\", a production that has been ranked among the best serials ever made. Chapman soon began receiving more leading roles and appeared opposite important stars such as Edward G. Robinson and George Sanders.", "id": "2722471" }, { "contents": "Jeanne Cagney\n\n\nRKO Pictures. However, she signed a long-term contract with Paramount Pictures. She appeared in 19 films between 1939 and 1965, including four films with her brother James: \"Yankee Doodle Dandy\" (1942), \"The Time of Your Life\" (1948), \"A Lion Is in the Streets\" (1953), and \"Man of a Thousand Faces\" (1957). Cagney gave a noted performance opposite Mickey Rooney in the film noir crime film \"Quicksand\" (1950). Cagney", "id": "6954933" }, { "contents": "Little Annie Rooney (1925 film)\n\n\nLittle Annie Rooney is a 1925 American silent comedy-drama film starring Mary Pickford and directed by William Beaudine. Pickford, one of the most successful actresses of the silent era, was best known throughout her career for her iconic portrayals of penniless young girls. After generating only modest box office revenue playing adults in her previous two films, Pickford wrote and produced \"Little Annie Rooney\" to cater to silent film audiences. Though she was 33 years old, Pickford played the title role, an Irish girl living in the slums", "id": "236551" }, { "contents": "Edith Barrett\n\n\n, she married leading man Vincent Price in 1938. The marriage ended in 1948. She and Price had one son, author/poet and environmental activist Vincent Barrett Price (born 1940). Her biggest Broadway success was as star of the now-obscure production \"Mrs. Moonlight\". In her first film, \"Ladies in Retirement\" (1941), she played one of the two half-witted half-sisters of Ida Lupino's homicidal character. Her best remembered movie role is possibly Mrs. Holland's mother-", "id": "18853813" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\nHardy film, \"A Family Affair\", in 1937. Mickey Rooney played Andy Hardy in the series, supported by Lewis Stone, Ann Rutherford, and Fay Holden. The movies were directed by George B. Seitz. Parker's character, Marion, appeared in most of the films, and her romances were a recurring feature of the series. Though she and the character she played were absent from the last two Andy Hardy films of the 1940s, Parker came out of retirement to play Marian Hardy in one more movie,", "id": "18919252" }, { "contents": "Nancy Walker\n\n\nrole provided Walker with her film debut when she signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to make a movie version, starring Lucille Ball (filmed in 1943). In 1943, she also appeared with Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in the second film version of \"Girl Crazy\". Her next film, \"Broadway Rhythm\", in which she had a featured musical number backed by Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra, \"Milkman, Keep Those Bottles Quiet\", ended Walker's contract with Metro. Her dry comic", "id": "9657966" }, { "contents": "List of Gloria Stuart performances\n\n\nstarred in two films opposite Shirley Temple: \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936), and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938), both for 20th Century Fox. She subsequently co-starred in \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939) opposite Don Ameche. Dissatisfied with her career in film, Stuart shifted her focus to stage acting. Between 1940 and 1942, Stuart appeared in numerous summer stock plays in New England, including a 1940 production of \"Our Town\" in which she starred alongside its playwright", "id": "19503931" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nBabes in Arms is the 1939 American film version of the 1937 Broadway musical of the same name. The film version stars Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland, and features Charles Winninger, Guy Kibbee, June Preisser, Grace Hayes, and Betty Jaynes. The film concerns a group of youngsters trying to put on a show to prove their vaudevillian parents wrong and make it to Broadway. The original Broadway script was significantly revamped, restructured, and rewritten to accommodate Hollywood's needs. In 1921, vaudeville performer Joe Moran (Winninger)", "id": "9219782" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nhim when he transferred to MGM in 1938. Turner attracted attention by playing the role of a murder victim in her first film, LeRoy's \"They Won't Forget\" (1937), and she later transitioned into featured roles, often appearing as an ingénue. During the early 1940s, Turner established herself as a leading actress and one of MGM's top performers, appearing in such films as the film noir \"Johnny Eager\" (1941); the musical \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941); the horror film", "id": "11929991" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nthe stature of most leading men. He appeared in a number of films, including \"Words and Music\" in 1948, which paired him for the last time with Garland on film (he appeared with her on one episode as a guest on \"The Judy Garland Show\"). He briefly starred in a CBS radio series, \"Shorty Bell\", in the summer of 1948, and reprised his role as \"Andy Hardy\", with most of the original cast, in a syndicated radio version of \"The", "id": "5690276" }, { "contents": "Donna Reed\n\n\nmany starlets at MGM, she played Mickey Rooney's love interest in an Andy Hardy film, in her case the hugely popular \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942). She was second billed in a children's film, \"Mokey\" (1942). Reed played a love interest in \"Calling Dr. Gillespie\" (1942) and \"Apache Trail\" (1942), then did a thriller with Edward Arnold, \"Eyes in the Night\" (1942), directed by Fred Zinnemann. Reed had", "id": "13840841" }, { "contents": "Evalyn Knapp\n\n\nHis Private Secretary\", a light comedy in which Wayne portrays a suit-and-tie wearing playboy determined to win her over. She also appeared in \"Corruption\" that year opposite Preston Foster. One of her better known film roles was opposite Ken Maynard in the 1934 film \"In Old Santa Fe\" featuring Gene Autry in his first screen appearance, in which he sang with a bluegrass band. She worked through 1941, but her career slowed afterward. In 1943, she played her last role, uncredited,", "id": "560741" }, { "contents": "Kathryn Grayson\n\n\nexercise. Within a year, Grayson had her first screen test. However, the studio executives were not satisfied, and she went through a further six months of lessons until she made her first film appearance in 1941's \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" as the character's secretary Kathryn Land. In the film, she takes part in three musical numbers. Two further films were planned for Grayson in 1941; \"White House Girl\", which was later made in 1948 with Durbin, and \"Very Warm for May", "id": "20045432" }, { "contents": "Susi Nicoletti\n\n\nSusi Nicoletti (3 September 1918 – 5 June 2005) was a Bavarian-born actress best remembered today for over 100 supporting roles mostly in comedy films. She was born as Susanne Emilie Luise Adele Habersack in Munich, but spent most of her childhood with her parents in Amsterdam. Back in Munich, she made her stage debut at age 13. Two years later she became a ballerina. In the early 1930s she turned to cabaret. In 1939, she was offered her first film role. In 1940 she moved to", "id": "6091110" }, { "contents": "Dorothy Morris\n\n\nShe did a screen test for the female lead in \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942), but lost to Donna Reed. Appearing in bit parts in several of the studio's more successful films, Morris was signed to a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract in 1941. For one of her early film roles, \"Cry 'Havoc'\" (1943), she affected a British accent. Her next picture was the well-received drama \"The Human Comedy\", which featured a star cast,", "id": "323808" }, { "contents": "The Courtship of Andy Hardy\n\n\nThe Courtship of Andy Hardy is a 1942 film, part of the Andy Hardy series. It gave an early role to Donna Reed although Mickey Rooney had lobbied for his then-wife Ava Gardner to have her part. Within a few months of the film's release, she filed for divorce. This was the 12th entry in the long-running \"Andy Hardy\" series of sixteen. When Carvel teenager and new tow truck-owner Andy Hardy is stopped by a policeman for driving without a license plate, a radio", "id": "20736523" }, { "contents": "Mae Busch\n\n\nMae Busch (18 June 1891 – 20 April 1946) was an Australian-born actress who worked in both silent and sound films in early Hollywood. In the latter part of her career she appeared in many Laurel and Hardy comedies, where she frequently played Hardy's shrewish wife. Mae Busch was born Annie May Busch in Melbourne, Victoria to popular Australian vaudeville performers Elizabeth Maria Lay and Frederick William Busch. Her mother had been active since 1883 under the stage names \"Dora Devere\" and then \"Dora Busch\";", "id": "10830566" }, { "contents": "Hannelore Schroth\n\n\ndebut at the age of nine in 1931's Max Ophüls' comedy \"Dann schon lieber Lebertran\" opposite her mother. Until age sixteen she attended drama school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Her early film successes include \"Spiel im Sommerwind\" (1938), \"Weisser Flieder\" (1939) and \"Kitty und die Weltkonferenz\" (1939) - the latter of which was her first leading role. During World War II, Hannelore Schroth continued performing in films. Unlike her father, Heinrich Schroth, who was by", "id": "16153872" }, { "contents": "Lupe Vélez\n\n\npopular actress, RKO Pictures did not renew her contract in 1934. Over the next few years, Vélez worked for various studio as a freelance actress; she also spent two years in England where she filmed \"The Morals of Marcus\" and \"Gypsy Melody\" (both 1936). She returned to Los Angeles the following year where she appeared in the final part of the Wheeler & Woolsey comedy \"High Flyers\" (1937). Vélez made her final appearance on Broadway in the 1938 musical \"You Never Know\"", "id": "20716058" }, { "contents": "Katharine Kavanaugh\n\n\nher biggest claims to fame was helping to create the Jones Family characters, who would appear in 17 low-budget films between 1936 and 1940. The first film in the series, \"Every Saturday Night\", was released in 1936, and Kavanaugh would also co-write \"Educating Father\", released later that same year. While her screenwriting career cooled in the late 1930s, she continued writing plays that were produced in the Los Angeles area until her death in 1942. She and her husband, Oliver Ziegfeld (", "id": "21036559" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\n, including \"The Wizard of Oz\" and \"Babes in Arms\". She was the fourth person to receive the award as well as only one of twelve in history to ever be presented with one. Garland starred in three films released in 1940: \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\", \"Strike Up the Band\", and \"Little Nellie Kelly\". In the last, she played her first adult role, a dual role of both mother and daughter. \"Little Nellie Kelly\" was purchased from George M.", "id": "13593089" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nliving on her own. In late 1949 Hardi and her husband moved to Jakarta. Two years later she made her feature film debut in a bit role in the Produksi Film Negara (PFN; State Film Corporation)'s \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". The following year she took a starring role in another PFN film, \"Si Pintjang\", portraying an old woman; as she was only twenty-four, she was artificially aged with make-up. That same year she appeared as the lead love interest in", "id": "15623084" }, { "contents": "Jane Frazee\n\n\nB film \"Melody and Moonlight\" (1940) for Republic Pictures. Shortly after the film's release she was signed by Universal Pictures and was featured in \"Buck Privates\", the high-grossing 1941 comedy/World War II film starring Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The strong impression she made in that film elevated her to leading-lady roles in Universal's popular \"B\" musicals, usually appearing opposite Robert Paige. She left Universal in late 1942, when she married actor-director Glenn Tryon, who", "id": "11708629" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\n\n\nAndy Hardy Meets Debutante is a 1940 American romantic comedy film directed by George B. Seitz. The film stars Lewis Stone, Mickey Rooney, Cecilia Parker, Fay Holden and Judy Garland. It is the ninth of the \"Andy Hardy\" full-length film series. Andy Hardy (Mickey Rooney) from Carvel becomes infatuated with a well-known young socialite, Daphne Fowler (Diana Lewis), from New York City. Even though he hasn’t met the woman in person, he drops her name to his friends and", "id": "11382757" }, { "contents": "Martha Vickers\n\n\nplayed minor roles in several films during the early 1940s, working first at Universal Studios and then at RKO Pictures. She next went to Warner Bros., where \"they gave her the star push, rearranging her surname to 'Vickers.'\" Her work there included the role of Carmen Sternwood, the promiscuous, drug-addicted younger sister of Lauren Bacall's character in \"The Big Sleep\" (1946). She also starred in a musical, \"The Time, the Place and the Girl\", followed by", "id": "721594" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nwas over, she was summoned back to work and ultimately performed two songs as a guest in the Rodgers and Hart biopic \"Words and Music\" (1948), which was her last appearance with Mickey Rooney. Despite the all-star cast, \"Words and Music\" barely broke even at the box office. Having regained her strength, as well as some needed weight during her suspension, Garland felt much better and in the fall of 1948, she returned to MGM to replace a pregnant June Allyson for the musical", "id": "13593101" }, { "contents": "Martha O'Driscoll\n\n\n's Dangerous\" (1937), she was not credited by name. In the Deanna Durbin vehicle \"Mad About Music\" (1937), she was billed as \"pretty girl.\" Her face appeared on such advertisements as Charm-Kurl Supreme Cold Wave and Max Factor Hollywood Face Powder. Universal lent O'Driscoll to MGM for parts in \"The Secret of Dr Kildare\" (1939) and \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1940), starring Mickey Rooney. RKO, however, gave O'Driscoll her first two starring", "id": "20196774" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nMarlia Hardi (also Marlia Hardy; 10 March 192718 June 1984) was an Indonesian film actress active from 1951 to 1983. Born in the Central Javan city of Magelang, she took to the stage in the 1940s before moving to Jakarta in 1949. Two years later she made her feature film debut in \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". Over the next two decades she appeared in over seventy films, became recognized for her depictions of mothers, and received the Citra Award for Best Supporting Actress. Despite her productiveness, however", "id": "15623082" }, { "contents": "Susan Peters\n\n\nLos Angeles. After completing filming of the comedy \"Andy Hardy's Double Life\" (1942) in which she had a lead role, Mervyn LeRoy cast Peters in the drama \"Random Harvest\", in which she portrayed a young woman who falls in love with her step-uncle. The film was one of the top 25 highest-earning films of the year, and Peters's performance garnered her critical acclaim, earning her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. The success of \"Random Harvest\" led", "id": "17519590" }, { "contents": "Paulette Goddard\n\n\nshe appeared as an uncredited extra in two films, the Laurel and Hardy short film \"Berth Marks\" (1929), and George Fitzmaurice's drama \"The Locked Door\" (1929). Following her divorce, she briefly visited Europe before returning to Hollywood in late 1930 with her mother. Her second attempt at acting was no more successful than the first, as she landed work only as an extra. In 1930, she signed her first film contract with producer Samuel Goldwyn to appear as a Goldwyn Girl in \"", "id": "3980436" }, { "contents": "Trixie Friganza\n\n\nTrixie Friganza (born Delia O'Callaghan; November 29, 1870 – February 27, 1955) began her career as an operetta soubrette, working her way from the chorus to starring in musical comedies to having her own feature act on the vaudeville circuit. She transitioned to film in the early 1920s mostly playing small characters that were quirky and comedic and retired from the stage in 1940 due to health concerns. She spent her last years teaching drama to young women in a convent school and when she died she left everything to the convent", "id": "13928014" }, { "contents": "Susan Hayward\n\n\nSusan Hayward (born Edythe Marrenner; June 30, 1917 – March 14, 1975) was an American actress and model. After working as a fashion model, Hayward traveled to Hollywood in 1937. She secured a film contract and played several small supporting roles over the next few years. By the late 1940s, the quality of her film roles had improved, and she achieved recognition for her dramatic abilities with the first of five Academy Award nominations for Best Actress for her performance as an alcoholic in \"Smash-Up,", "id": "14143916" }, { "contents": "Nella Walker\n\n\nyear to 1938, she had 23 film appearances. Her biggest film appearance during this period was in \"Young Dr. Kildare\" with Lionel Barrymore and Lew Ayres. Throughout the 1930s, her career was strong, and despite never being a premier star, she repeatedly had solid acting roles. She finished the decade strongly in 1939 with nine film roles, only three of which were uncredited. The 1940s mirrored her success of the previous decade in many ways, with appearances in 37 films from 1940 to 1947. Later in her", "id": "4686869" }, { "contents": "May Wallace\n\n\nMay Wallace (August 23, 1877 – December 11, 1938) was an American film actress. She appeared in 63 films between 1914 and 1939. Wallace was born in Russiaville, Indiana and died in Los Angeles, California, where she worked in Hollywood as a film actress. She often played supporting roles for producer Hal Roach in his Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang comedies, mostly in maternal roles. Wallace was married to Thomas W. Maddox until her death, they had one daughter and one son. She died of", "id": "9169980" }, { "contents": "Ora Carew\n\n\na film editor. Ora's birth year has been listed as 1893, on her death certificate and is also what her grave says, but Utah birth index and the 1900 census indicate 1891. She was educated by private tutors and at Roland Hall Seminary. After her father died on June 19, 1896, her mother moved with her three children to California. Her screen career began with MGM, following numerous engagements in vaudeville, musical comedy and stock. Some of her most notable films with MGM were \"Go West,", "id": "19207733" }, { "contents": "Eilene Janssen\n\n\nMary Eilene Janssen (born May 25, 1938), is a retired American film and television actress. Eilene Janssen was born in Los Angeles, California on May 25, 1938, to parents Henry Janssen and Mary Ellen Thompson. She began her film career as a child actress in the early 1940s. With her father being a longtime worker for Universal Studios, Eilene Janssen made her first screen appearance in the 1940 film \"Sandy Gets Her Man\". She continued to have bit parts in several movies such as \"Two", "id": "12362318" }, { "contents": "Ann Rutherford\n\n\nLouis Mayer originally refused the loan because he considered the role too minor, but Rutherford passionately appealed to him to change his mind. In December 1939, while promoting the new movie, Rutherford visited six Confederate Army veterans at the Confederate Soldiers Home near Atlanta. One of the veterans gave Rutherford a rose corsage tied with Confederate colors. From 1937 until 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. Her first film in this series was \"You're Only Young Once\"", "id": "6472820" }, { "contents": "Gloria Stuart\n\n\nMan\" (1933), followed by roles in the Shirley Temple musicals \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936) and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938). She also starred as Queen Anne in the musical comedy \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939). Beginning in 1940, Stuart slowed her film career, instead performing in regional theater in New England. In 1945, following a tenure as a contract player for Twentieth Century Fox, Stuart abandoned her acting career and shifted to a career as an artist", "id": "3454792" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nand Judy Garland in the Andy Hardy film \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938). During the shoot, Turner completed her studies with an educational social worker, allowing her to graduate high school that year. The film was a box-office success, and her appearance in it as a flirtatious high school student convinced studio head Louis B. Mayer that Turner could be the next Jean Harlow, a sex symbol who had died six months before Turner's arrival at MGM. Mayer helped further Turner's career by giving her", "id": "11930007" }, { "contents": "Linda Darnell\n\n\nLinda Darnell (born Monetta Eloyse Darnell, October 16, 1923April 10, 1965) was an American film actress. Darnell progressed from modeling as a child to acting in theater and film. At the encouragement of her mother, she made her first film in 1939, and appeared in supporting roles in big-budget films for 20th Century Fox throughout the 1940s. She rose to fame with co-starring roles opposite Tyrone Power in adventure films, and established a main character career after her role in \"Forever Amber\" (", "id": "9752181" }, { "contents": "Marcia Mae Jones\n\n\nsigned her to co-star with Jackie Moran in a few rustic romances; when this series lapsed, both Jones and Moran joined Monogram's popular action-comedy series starring Frankie Darro. As a young adult, she continued to work in motion pictures, notably in \"Nine Girls\" (1944) and \"Arson, Inc.\" (1948). Like many familiar faces of the 1940s, she appeared on numerous television programs. In 1951 she appeared as comic foil to Buster Keaton in Keaton's filmed TV series.", "id": "5963847" }, { "contents": "Peggy Drake\n\n\nPeggy Drake (6 October 1922 – 19 September 2014), was an Austrian film and television actress. She primarily appeared in B-movies of the 1940s. Born Lieselotte Mayer in Vienna, Austria, she moved to the United States with her family at the age of three. Her acting career started with an uncredited role in the film \"Too Many Girls\" (1940). Her career was short-lived, appearing in five films between 1940 and 1942, most notably in the serial film \"King of the", "id": "8901594" }, { "contents": "Signe Hasso\n\n\nfilm in Sweden. In 1933, she made her first film, \"Tystnadens hus\", with German film director/cameraman Harry Hasso, whom she married the same year. They had a son by the time she was 19. They divorced in 1941. In 1940, she moved to the United States, where she signed a contract with RKO Pictures, who promoted her as \"the next Garbo\". With few RKO roles forthcoming, she turned to the stage to make a living. According to the Internet Broadway", "id": "19347089" }, { "contents": "Rita La Roy\n\n\nand the \"cobra dance\" in which her feet and legs were tied together under a stylized snakeskin so that she danced by undulating her torso.\" In 1929, she made her film debut in \"The Delightful Rogue\", starring opposite matinee idol Rod La Rocque. Over the next several years, working as part of the RKO Radio Pictures stable, she appeared in both starring and supporting roles. While her final significant role was in the 1940 comedy-mystery \"Hold That Woman!\", she had several small", "id": "13534727" }, { "contents": "Elizabeth Taylor\n\n\nto socially prominent American parents, Taylor moved with her family to Los Angeles in 1939. She made her acting debut in a minor role in the Universal Pictures film \"There's One Born Every Minute\" (1942) but the studio ended her contract after a year. She was then signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and became a popular teen star after appearing in \"National Velvet\" (1944). She transitioned to more mature roles in the 1950s, when she starred in the comedy \"Father of the", "id": "19979789" }, { "contents": "Karin Booth\n\n\nKarin Booth (born June Francis Hoffman, June 19, 1916 – July 27, 2003) was an American film and TV actress of the 1940s to 1960s. She was born June Francis Hoffman on June 19, 1916, in Minneapolis, Minnesota to Francis T. and Ebba V. Hoffman. She lived in Portland and Los Angeles, attending John Marshall High School. She began her career modeling and being a chorus girl in 1939 and was signed under contract to Paramount Pictures in 1941 under the name Katharine Booth. After changing her", "id": "1386964" }, { "contents": "Saranya Ponvannan\n\n\ndebut in Mani Ratnam's production \"Nayakan,\" as the female lead opposite Kamal Haasan in 1987. She made her first Telugu appearance in 1988 film \"Neerajanam;\" her Malayalam debut was a year later in the 1989 film \"Artham\" starring opposite Mamooty. In 1996 almost during the end of her career as a lead actress she debuted in Kannada cinema in \"Appaji\". After marriage in 1995, she semi retired from acting. In 2000 she appeared playing the lead role in the comedy television series, \"", "id": "2557700" }, { "contents": "Franciska Gaal\n\n\n\", opposite Fredric March. She followed this with the comedy \"The Girl Downstairs\" (1938) with Franchot Tone, a remake of her Austrian success \"Catherine the Last\". In 1939, Gaal co-starred with Bing Crosby in the musical \"Paris Honeymoon\". She returned to Hungary in 1940 because of her mother's illness and remained there for the duration of World War II. In 1946, she began work on a new film in Budapest the Soviet-backed \"Renee XIV\" but filming was", "id": "19308441" }, { "contents": "Jo Ann Sayers\n\n\nstudent production and invited her to Hollywood for a screen test. She was offered a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her first credited film role was in 1938. In 1940, she was selected for the titular role in the Broadway production of \"My Sister Eileen\", opposite Shirley Booth, who was two decades Sayers' senior, which opened on December 26, 1940. She remained in the Broadway cast until June 1942, when she left to marry Anthony A. Bliss (1913-1991), a New", "id": "6389492" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nstar Baby Rosalie Essex (June Preisser), but Mickey gets in a fight with Jeff. Mickey tells Judge Black that his parents' show flopped. The judge gives Mickey 30 days to pay damages. Don and Molly sing \"Where or When\" with an orchestra of children. Mickey has a date with Baby and dines in her house. Mickey wants Baby in the show, which needs $287. She offers to pay it. Mickey smokes a cigar and leaves sick. Mickey tells Patsy that Baby has to play", "id": "9219785" }, { "contents": "Chela Ruiz\n\n\nChela Ruiz (5 June 1921 - 1 December 1999) was an Argentine actress. Her career spanned radio, film, television and stage, and in 1997 the Argentine Association of Actors awarded her the prestigious Premio Podestá for her theatrical work. Ruiz made her professional debut on Radio Splendid, along with her sister Nora Cullen, working as an actress and reader. In the 1940s and 1950s she was known for her narration of radio plays by Nené Cascallar. She began appearing on stage in 1942. A film career followed later", "id": "10450238" }, { "contents": "Petula Clark\n\n\nher film career in the late 1960s, starring in two big musical films. In \"Finian's Rainbow\" (1968), she starred opposite Fred Astaire and she was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for her performance. With her role, she again made history by becoming Astaire's final on-screen dance partner. The following year she was cast with Peter O'Toole in \"Goodbye, Mr. Chips\" (1969), a musical adaptation of the classic James Hilton novella", "id": "19868394" }, { "contents": "Sara Haden\n\n\n\". Haden later became a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract player in the late 1930s and had smallish roles in many of the studio's films, most notably in the Andy Hardy series starring Mickey Rooney, cast as the spinsterish Aunt Milly Forrest. Haden made her last film, \"Andy Hardy Comes Home\", in 1958, but was active on television until a 1965 guest spot on \"Dr. Kildare\". She was most notable for her stern, humorless characterisations such as a truant officer in Shirley Temple's \"", "id": "16961173" }, { "contents": "Rafaela Ottiano\n\n\n's last film was the musical comedy \"I Married an Angel\" (1942), starring Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. During her career in film, she appeared in approximately 45 motion pictures, opposite such actors as Barbara Stanwyck, Conrad Nagel, Peter Lorre, Zasu Pitts, and Katharine Hepburn. Ottiano lived in the Times Square area during the Prohibition Era and never married. She died in 1942, in the Boston home of her late parents, of intestinal cancer at the age of 54. She is buried at", "id": "9444719" }, { "contents": "Doris Davenport\n\n\nDoris Davenport, also known as Doris Jordan (January 1, 1917 – June 18, 1980) was an American film actress during the 1930s and early 1940s. Davenport was born in Moline, Illinois, but raised in Hollywood, California. She started auditioning for acting roles, and performed in her first film in 1934, titled \"Kid Millions\". From 1934 to 1939, she appeared in only five films, supporting herself by working in New York City as a fashion model between films. However, when she auditioned", "id": "2801211" }, { "contents": "Patricia Dane\n\n\nPatricia Dane (born Thelma Pearl Pippins, August 4, 1919 – June 5, 1995) was an American film actress of the 1940s. Dane was born Thelma Pearl Pippins in Blountstown, Florida and was also known as Thelma Byrnes after her stepfather. She began her career designing clothes for a New York City dress firm and was signed to an MGM contract in 1941. Dane's earliest appearances were two uncredited roles in \"Ziegfeld Girl\" and \"I'll Wait for You\" (both 1941). She played the", "id": "18013995" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\na young girl. Her new contract called for a starting salary of $75 a week and scales up to $1000 a week for the seventh year. In November 1935, Parker purchased a new home in Beverly Hills, California. The following year she joined the ballet school of Dave Gould at MGM, along with Maureen O'Sullivan. By the fall of 1936, Parker was studying singing. She played Marian Hardy in the extremely popular Andy Hardy film series in the late 1930s and early 1940s. She was in the original", "id": "18919251" }, { "contents": "Rooney Mara\n\n\nwas always afraid that I might fail.\" Her first and only role in high school was Juliet in \"Romeo and Juliet\", which she got after being signed up to audition by a friend. Mara acted in a few student films while at NYU, and then began her career in acting, first auditioning at the age of nineteen. Mara first appeared as an extra in films which starred her sister, including a bit-part in the 2005 direct-to-video horror film \"\". She found work", "id": "18311311" }, { "contents": "Georgiana Young\n\n\nBelzer and Gladys Royal. Along with her half-sisters, she was raised Roman Catholic. Young's acting career was short-lived, though she appeared in three films. Her debut role was as Berta Hubbard, sister of Mabel Gardiner Hubbard, in Irving Cummings's 1939 biographical film \"The Story of Alexander Graham Bell\", opposite her sisters Loretta (as Mabel), Sally, and Polly Ann. She would later have bit parts in two other films: \"No, No, Nanette\" (1940)", "id": "6269969" }, { "contents": "Glikeriya Bogdanova-Chesnokova\n\n\nmedals for her service. Following the war, in 1946, Bogdanova-Chesnokova returned to the Leningrad State Theatre of Musical Comedy. In 1947, she received the Stalin Prize. In the mid 1950s, Bogdanova-Chesnokova performed during three circus seasons with the clown, The act involved acrobatic actions. In 1955, Bogdanova-Chesnokova made her first significant film appearance. She played Maria Mikhailovna in the comedy film \"Tamer of Tigers\". Generally, Bogdanova-Chesnokova was a character actress taking supporting roles. However, in", "id": "5458931" }, { "contents": "Judi West\n\n\nJudi West (born December 15, 1942) is an American actress, best known for her supporting role opposite Jack Lemmon in the 1966 comedy film \"The Fortune Cookie. Judi West acted in a few films in the 1960s and also appeared in television in the 1960s through the early 1980s. Her notable film appearances include: She had earlier worked on the Broadway stage including \"A Family Affair\" (1962) and \"She Loves Me\" (1963-1964). Married from 1971 to 1989 to actor John Rubinstein", "id": "5957659" }, { "contents": "Judy Holliday\n\n\nJudy Holliday (born Judith Tuvim, June 21, 1921 – June 7, 1965) was an American actress, comedian, and singer. She began her career as part of a nightclub act before working in Broadway plays and musicals. Her success in the 1946 stage production of \"Born Yesterday\" as Billie Dawn led to her being cast in the 1950 film version for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. She appeared in several films", "id": "15453399" }, { "contents": "Elena Lucena\n\n\nMaría Elena Lucena Arcuri (25 September 1914 – 7 October 2015) was an Argentine film actress of the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema (1940–60). She began her career in radio in the 1930s and reached her greatest success with the role of \"Chimbela\", which was later depicted in film, theater and television. Her extensive film career includes approximately 50 films, including notable performances in \"Chimbela\" (1939) and \"Una noche cualquiera\" (1951). During the 1940s she participated in films with comedians", "id": "16119436" }, { "contents": "Florence Nash\n\n\nLynch in \"Within the Law\". She was a noted theater actor and comedian in vaudeville until the 1930s (appearing in sketches including \"In 1999\"), when she moved to Hollywood to try her luck with films. Her most notable role was as \"Nancy Blake\" in the 1939 MGM blockbuster \"The Women\". She also was the author of a book of verse, \"June Dusk\", published in 1918. After her retirement from acting in 1939, she spent the next decade living comfortably in", "id": "6401074" }, { "contents": "Doris Nolan\n\n\nher jitters, the show was a success and Nolan got positive reviews. When Nolan left the play, Woods sent her back to Hollywood, getting her a contract with Universal Pictures. She continued to move back and forth between movies and theater throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Her most prominent film appearance was in the 1938 version of \"Holiday\", where she played alongside Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Her subsequent film roles went downhill, but she reinvigorated her Broadway career with an 18-month stint in \"The Doughgirls\",", "id": "14779965" }, { "contents": "Marjorie Stapp\n\n\nMarjorie Stapp (September 17, 1921 – June 2, 2014), was an American actress who was mainly in low-budget pictures. Stapp began her film career when she signed a contract with the film studio 20th Century-Fox in the 1940s. Her first screen appearance was in \"The Kid from Brooklyn\", a 1946 film starring Danny Kaye. This was followed by another minor appearance in \"Linda, Be Good\" (1947). Eventually, she landed a leading role in the Western movie \"The", "id": "3140505" }, { "contents": "Roshini (actress)\n\n\nRoshini is an Indian film actress who has worked in the Telugu and Tamil film industries. She is the younger sister actress Jyothika and half sister to Nagma. After getting a recommendation by her sister Nagma, Roshini made her acting debut in Selva's comedy film \"Sishya\", where she played the lead role alongside Karthik. She subsequently starred in \"Master\" (1997), opposite Chiranjeevi. Roshini was keen to accept performance-orientated roles and turned down several offers in late 1997 to be a part of films in", "id": "12724581" }, { "contents": "Lola Albright\n\n\nmotion picture debut with a small singing role in the 1947 musical comedy \"The Unfinished Dance\" and then appeared the following year in two Judy Garland movies: \"The Pirate\" and \"Easter Parade\". She first gained studio and public notice in the 1949 film noir production \"Champion\" with her portrayal of the wife of a manipulative boxing manager; she falls for a prizefighter played by Kirk Douglas. For the next several years, she appeared in secondary roles in over 20 films, including several B westerns. Among", "id": "18089616" }, { "contents": "Marika Rökk\n\n\nthe 1930s and 1940s. She had the technical skill and glamour to carry off the formulaic plots and dialogue and provide German audiences with a home grown star to rival the popular American actresses. \"Der Bettelstudent\" and \"Gasparone\", followed by \"Hello Janine!\" in 1939, all starred her together with Johannes Heesters and established them as the \"dream couple\" of the musical comedy genre. In her appearances she cultivated her \"magyar\" accent conveying a notion of \"paprika\" exoticism. Her films, which", "id": "9061566" }, { "contents": "Fay Wray\n\n\nShe continued to star in various films, including \"The Richest Girl in the World\", a second film with Joel McCrea, but by the early 1940s, her appearances became less frequent. She retired from acting in 1942 after her second marriage but due to financial exigencies soon resumed her acting career, and over the next three decades, Wray appeared in several films and also frequently on television. Wray was cast in the 1953-54 ABC situation comedy \"The Pride of the Family\" as Catherine Morrison. Paul Hartman", "id": "10781506" }, { "contents": "Margaret O'Brien\n\n\n(1944), opposite Judy Garland. As Tootie Smith, the feisty but fragile little sister of Judy Garland, she was a bright point in a very good film, especially in her musical numbers with Garland and during a Halloween sequence in which she confronts a grouchy neighbor. For her performance, she was awarded a special juvenile Oscar in 1944. Margaret and June Allyson were known as \"The Town Criers\" of MGM. \"We were always in competition: I wanted to cry better than June, and June wanted", "id": "7504217" }, { "contents": "Ann Sothern\n\n\nSothern appeared in two musical films in 1948, \"April Showers\" opposite Jack Carson and \"Words and Music\" starring an all-star cast of MGM actors, singers and dancers. In 1949, she appeared in the Academy Award-winning film \"A Letter to Three Wives\" for 20th Century Fox. Sothern received excellent reviews for her performance but the acclaim failed to stimulate her career, which had begun to wane in the late 1940s. In 1949, Sothern contracted hepatitis which she would battle for the next three", "id": "2026182" }, { "contents": "Jane Isbell\n\n\nWar soldier who once saved the life of Andrew Jackson. Clark Isbell's father was also a cousin of Alabama Governor William J. Samford. The Isbells moved to Los Angeles when Jane was an infant. The elder of two sisters, she began modeling and appearing as an extra in films when only four years old. In 1932, she made her first Mickey McGuire comedy starring Mickey Rooney and would eventually make five films in the Mickey McGuire series, similar to the Our Gang films. She grew up with child stars for playmates", "id": "12640286" }, { "contents": "Shirley Palmer (actress)\n\n\n1930 she appeared with Dorothy Sebastian and Neil Hamilton in \"Ladies Must Play\", her only film of that year. In 1932 she appeared in \"This Sporting Age\", and in 1933 she starred in probably her most recognizable role, starring opposite John Wayne in \"Somewhere in Sonora\". It would be her last credited role. She had two uncredited roles following that film, one the same year and the other in 1934, after which her career ended. She married once, to writer John Collier, and", "id": "3797930" }, { "contents": "Betty Grable\n\n\n(1930), starring Eddie Cantor. Although she received no on-screen credit for her performance, she led the film's opening musical number, entitled \"Cowboys\". In 1932, she signed a contract with RKO Radio Pictures, and she was assigned to a succession of acting, singing, and dancing classes at the studio's drama school. Her first film for the studio, \"Probation\" (1932), provided the 14-year-old Grable with her first credited screen role. Over the next few years", "id": "17559458" }, { "contents": "Erika Jayne\n\n\n, and pink.\" Soon after she gave birth to a son, Thomas Zizzo, Jr. After the couple divorced a few years later, she relocated to Los Angeles to pursue her dream of becoming a singer and performer. Early in her career, Girardi worked as a waitress to support herself between acting jobs. Girardi began her acting career in the early 1990s by appearing in small roles in several American television series and films. Her first on-screen appearance was a role as Suzanne Morton in the episode \"Prescription for", "id": "22006264" }, { "contents": "Thelma Scott\n\n\nThelma Scott (17 June 1913 – 23 November 2006) was an Australian character actress and television director whose 70-year career in theatre, radio, film and Australian television made her one of her country's most recognizable and beloved personalities. Having started her career in the early 1930s in theatre and film productions, she became one of the nation's biggest radio performers, during the 1940s featuring in productions such as \"Big Sister\" and \"Blue Hills\". She returned to made for TV films in the early late 1950s and", "id": "7852633" } ]
June Preisser ( June 26 , 1920 -- September 19 , 1984 ) was an American actress , briefly popular in musical films during the late 1930s and early 1940s , many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat . Born in New Orleans , Louisiana , Preisser was one of six children , and was an underweight baby . Her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age , in an attempt to build her strength . There she , and her sister Cherry , learnt acrobatics . Their mother was keen to have them follow a career in showbusiness , especially when their father died suddenly , leaving the family with few options to make a living . When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home , and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville , and later for the [START_ENT] Ziegfeld Follies [END_ENT] in 1934 and 1936 . The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States , and also performed in Europe , most notably for . Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage , and June was signed to a film contract by . Her first film Dancing Co-Ed ( 1939 ) provided only a small part , but her next film , Babes in Arms ( 1939 ) , gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland . She performed with Rooney and Garland again in Strike Up the Band ( 1940 ) , and with Rooney in two " Andy Hardy " films , Judge Hardy and Son ( 1939 ) and Andy Hardy 's Private Secretary ( 1941 ) . Gallant Sons ( 1940 ) placed her in a comedic murder mystery , and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in ( 1941 ) , and followed this with Sweater Girl ( 1942 ) , opposite Eddie Bracken . She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry , and the birth of a son , Ricky . By this time , MGM had little interest in promoting her , and she left to work for Monogram Pictures . She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years , and played the character " Dodie Rogers " in seven " high school " comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948 . Her final film was ( 1948 ) , and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of Annie Get Your Gun
adf68c7c-75ad-41bb-9f02-d2791b44dce2_June_Preisse:3
[{"answer": "Ziegfeld Follies", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "264637", "title": "Ziegfeld Follies"}]}]
[ { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n, and June was signed to a film contract by MGM. Her first film, \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), provided only a small part, but her next film, \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. She performed with Rooney and Garland again in \"Strike Up the Band\" (1940), and with Rooney in two \"Andy Hardy\" films, \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939) and \"Andy Hardy", "id": "17067760" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nJune Preisser (June 26, 1920 – September 19, 1984) was an American actress, popular in musical films during the late 1930s and through the 1940s, many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat. Born in New Orleans, Preisser was one of six children. An underweight child, her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age, in an attempt to build her strength. There she, and her sister Cherry, learned acrobatics. Their mother was keen to have them follow a career", "id": "17067758" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n's Private Secretary\" (1941). \"Gallant Sons\" (1940) placed her in a comedic murder mystery, and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in \"Henry Aldrich for President\" (1941), and followed this with \"Sweater Girl\" (1942), opposite Eddie Bracken. She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry, and the birth of a son, Ricky. By this time, MGM had little interest in promoting her, and she left to work", "id": "17067761" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nfor Monogram Pictures. She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years, and played the character \"Dodie Rogers\" in seven \"high school\" comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948. Her final film was Music Man (1948), and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of \"Annie Get Your Gun\", she retired from acting. She divorced not long after, and taught dancing and acrobatics in Los Angeles, before moving with her son to Florida. They", "id": "17067762" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nin show business, especially when their father died suddenly, leaving the family with few options to make a living. When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home, and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville, and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936. The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States, and also performed in Europe, most notably for George VI of the United Kingdom. Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage", "id": "17067759" }, { "contents": "Melody Trail\n\n\nand Prejudice\" (1940). In 1939, she played the role of Carreen O'Hara, the sister of Scarlet O'Hara, in the film \"Gone with the Wind\". From 1937 to 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. She retired from films in 1950. Rutherford died on June 11, 2012 at her home in Beverly Hills, California. \"Melody Trail\" was filmed August 21–27, 1935. The film had an operating budget of $15,075", "id": "2111015" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nHardy Family movies as a literal girl-next-door to Rooney's character Andy Hardy, in \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938), although Hardy's love interest was played by Lana Turner. They teamed as lead characters for the first time in \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), ultimately appearing in five additional films, including Hardy films \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\" (1940) and \"Life Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland stated that she, Rooney, and other young", "id": "13593082" }, { "contents": "Annie Get Your Gun (film)\n\n\n, MGM's biggest musical comedy star, was originally cast as Annie Oakley. She recorded all her songs for the soundtrack and worked for two months under the direction of Busby Berkeley and dance director Robert Alton. Berkeley and Garland had worked together previously in the late 1930s and early 1940s in a successful series of backstage musicals teaming her with fellow juvenile star Mickey Rooney. Berkeley had been fired from the Garland/Rooney musical \"Girl Crazy\" in 1943 due to personality clashes with musical director Roger Edens and for driving Garland very", "id": "13779025" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nYear for her live recording \"Judy at Carnegie Hall\" (1961). Garland began performing in vaudeville as a child with her two older sisters, and was later signed to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a teenager. Although she appeared in more than two dozen films with MGM and received acclaim for many different roles, she is often best remembered for her portrayal of Dorothy Gale in \"The Wizard of Oz\" (1939). Garland was a frequent on-screen partner of both Mickey Rooney and Gene Kelly,", "id": "13593062" }, { "contents": "Louise LaPlanche\n\n\n, portraying a gypsy girl in \"The Hunchback of Notre Dame\" in 1923. Both LaPlanche began competing in California beauty pageants. In 1939, Louise LaPlanche was crowned Miss Catalina. Her Miss Catalina win led to a film contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). She appeared in the 1940 MGM musical film, \"Strike Up the Band\", which starred Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. LaPlanche later left MGM and signed on to Paramount Studios. She was cast in several Paramount films, including 1942's", "id": "3022959" }, { "contents": "Bonita Granville\n\n\nfilm success led to Granville reprising the role in three sequels from 1938 to 1939, including \"Nancy Drew... Reporter\" (1939). As a young adult, she was once again cast in supporting roles, often in prestigious films such as \"Now, Voyager\" (1942), as well as two Andy Hardy films with Mickey Rooney, \"Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble\" (1944) and \"Love Laughs at Andy Hardy\" (1946). She is also remembered for her starring role in the World", "id": "12873960" }, { "contents": "Eve Arden\n\n\nThis was followed by roles in the crime film \"The Forgotten Woman\" (1939), and the comedy \"At the Circus\" (1939), opposite Groucho Marx, a role that would require her to perform acrobatics. In 1940, she appeared opposite Clark Gable in \"Comrade X\", followed by the drama \"Manpower\" (1941), opposite Marlene Dietrich. She also appeared in a supporting part in the Red Skelton comedy \"Whistling in the Dark\" (1941), and the romantic comedy \"", "id": "10321268" }, { "contents": "Shirley Temple\n\n\nher departure from Twentieth Century-Fox, Shirley was signed by MGM for her comeback; the studio made plans to team her with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney for the Andy Hardy series. The idea was quickly abandoned. The next idea was teaming her with Garland and Rooney for the musical \"Babes on Broadway\". Fearing that either of the latter two could easily upstage Temple, MGM replaced her with Virginia Weidler. As a result, her only film for Metro was \"Kathleen\" in 1941, a story about an", "id": "7504264" }, { "contents": "Barbara Read\n\n\ncompany. When she failed to receive any roles because of her lack of experience, she joined the Laguna Beach Players theater, where she acted in a new play each month for two years. Her first film appearance was one of the three principal girls in the 1936 comedy film \"Three Smart Girls\", which also starred Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. From 1937 through 1939, Read appeared in nine films, most notably starring in \"The Spellbinder\", opposite Lee Tracy. From 1940 through 1948, she appeared in", "id": "5406875" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy\n\n\nLife Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland's character, Betsy Booth, is an aspiring singer and she sings in the first two of these films. However, although Garland songs were planned for the final film, they were eventually dropped. Unlike Garland-Rooney films outside of the \"Andy Hardy\" series, Rooney's Hardy character is not a musician, so Garland and Rooney do not perform together in the Hardy films. Rooney played the character continuously from age 16 to 25, when he appeared in", "id": "7714497" }, { "contents": "Fay Holden\n\n\nthe depression era. Eventually they left Vancouver and moved to Hollywood. Holden appeared in 46 motion pictures between 1935 and 1958, but is best known for her recurring role as Emily Hardy, mother of Mickey Rooney's character in the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" film series. The series was enormously popular in the late 1930s and early '40s, and Holden was in 15 of the 16 Hardy movies, surpassed only by Rooney, who was in all 16. Holden is also remembered for her performance as Hazel, the mother", "id": "15552902" }, { "contents": "Margaret Early\n\n\nBrent, Bette Davis, and Fay Bainter. She later became a freelance actress and found herself working in various roles at such studios as RKO, Warner Bros., and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her other screen roles include parts in \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939), \"Strike Up The Band\" (1940), \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" (1941), and \"Stage Door Canteen\" (1943). She made her last screen appearance in \"Cinderella Jones\" (1946)", "id": "11267109" }, { "contents": "Sheila Darcy\n\n\n1935 her career had taken off, and from then until 1941 she had roles in 41 films. In most of her early films, she played the heroine in B-movies, often Westerns. Darcy's best known roles were as the female lead in cliffhangers, such as the 1939 film \"Zorro's Fighting Legion\", in which she performed opposite Reed Hadley. She also played the Dragon Lady in the serial \"Terry and the Pirates\", released in 1940. In Westerns, she often played opposite popular cowboy", "id": "21067295" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nIn 1937, Rooney made his first film alongside Judy Garland with \"Thoroughbreds Don't Cry\". Garland and Rooney became close friends as they co-starred in future films and became a successful song-and-dance team. Audiences delighted in seeing the \"playful interactions between the two stars showcase a wonderful chemistry\". Along with three of the \"Andy Hardy\" films, where she portrayed a girl attracted to Andy, they appeared together in a string of successful musicals, including \"Babes in Arms\" (1939", "id": "5690267" }, { "contents": "Brenda Marshall\n\n\nArdis Ankerson (September 29, 1915 – July 30, 1992), known as Brenda Marshall, was a Filipino-born, American film actress. Marshall made her first film appearance in the 1939 \"Espionage Agent\". The following year, she played the leading lady to Errol Flynn in \"The Sea Hawk\". After divorcing actor Richard Gaines in 1940, she married William Holden in 1941, and her own career soon slowed. She starred opposite James Cagney in \"Captains of the Clouds\" (1942).", "id": "14392731" }, { "contents": "Julie Haydon\n\n\nmade by MGM. In 1932, she signed with RKO, and her first major role came that year in \"The Conquerors\", directed by William Wellman Her most notable performance came in 1935's \"The Scoundrel\" playing opposite Noël Coward, but, despite a new contract with MGM, only a few more films were to come in her short career, including \"A Family Affair\" (1937), the initial movie in the Andy Hardy series. Some have held that it was Haydon and not Fay Wray who", "id": "19690260" }, { "contents": "Jean Darling\n\n\nAssociation. She turned down an offer to appear alongside Mickey Rooney in one of the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" movies, and went on Broadway, making her debut in the musical \"Count Me In\" in 1942. Darling's stage career hit a real high when she landed the role of Carrie Pipperidge in the original Broadway production of \"Carousel\" in 1945. She appeared in 850 consecutive performances. Her role as Carrie Pipperidge helped her with parts for radio and TV in the 1950s. She hosted her own television show", "id": "1616169" }, { "contents": "List of Lana Turner performances\n\n\nLana Turner was an American actress who appeared in over fifty films during her career, which spanned four decades. Discovered in 1937 at age 16, she signed a contract with Warner Bros. and appeared in several films for the studio before signing a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The studio's co-founder, Louis B. Mayer, helped further her career by casting her in several youth-oriented comedies and musicals, including \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941),", "id": "7891475" }, { "contents": "Marguerite Chapman\n\n\ncontract to Warner Brothers in 1941, and then with Columbia from 1942 to 1948. She made her film debut in 1940, working for the next two years in small roles. In 1942, her big break came with Republic Pictures when she was cast in the leading female role in the twelve-part adventure film serial \"Spy Smasher\", a production that has been ranked among the best serials ever made. Chapman soon began receiving more leading roles and appeared opposite important stars such as Edward G. Robinson and George Sanders.", "id": "2722471" }, { "contents": "Jeanne Cagney\n\n\nRKO Pictures. However, she signed a long-term contract with Paramount Pictures. She appeared in 19 films between 1939 and 1965, including four films with her brother James: \"Yankee Doodle Dandy\" (1942), \"The Time of Your Life\" (1948), \"A Lion Is in the Streets\" (1953), and \"Man of a Thousand Faces\" (1957). Cagney gave a noted performance opposite Mickey Rooney in the film noir crime film \"Quicksand\" (1950). Cagney", "id": "6954933" }, { "contents": "Little Annie Rooney (1925 film)\n\n\nLittle Annie Rooney is a 1925 American silent comedy-drama film starring Mary Pickford and directed by William Beaudine. Pickford, one of the most successful actresses of the silent era, was best known throughout her career for her iconic portrayals of penniless young girls. After generating only modest box office revenue playing adults in her previous two films, Pickford wrote and produced \"Little Annie Rooney\" to cater to silent film audiences. Though she was 33 years old, Pickford played the title role, an Irish girl living in the slums", "id": "236551" }, { "contents": "Edith Barrett\n\n\n, she married leading man Vincent Price in 1938. The marriage ended in 1948. She and Price had one son, author/poet and environmental activist Vincent Barrett Price (born 1940). Her biggest Broadway success was as star of the now-obscure production \"Mrs. Moonlight\". In her first film, \"Ladies in Retirement\" (1941), she played one of the two half-witted half-sisters of Ida Lupino's homicidal character. Her best remembered movie role is possibly Mrs. Holland's mother-", "id": "18853813" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\nHardy film, \"A Family Affair\", in 1937. Mickey Rooney played Andy Hardy in the series, supported by Lewis Stone, Ann Rutherford, and Fay Holden. The movies were directed by George B. Seitz. Parker's character, Marion, appeared in most of the films, and her romances were a recurring feature of the series. Though she and the character she played were absent from the last two Andy Hardy films of the 1940s, Parker came out of retirement to play Marian Hardy in one more movie,", "id": "18919252" }, { "contents": "Nancy Walker\n\n\nrole provided Walker with her film debut when she signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to make a movie version, starring Lucille Ball (filmed in 1943). In 1943, she also appeared with Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in the second film version of \"Girl Crazy\". Her next film, \"Broadway Rhythm\", in which she had a featured musical number backed by Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra, \"Milkman, Keep Those Bottles Quiet\", ended Walker's contract with Metro. Her dry comic", "id": "9657966" }, { "contents": "List of Gloria Stuart performances\n\n\nstarred in two films opposite Shirley Temple: \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936), and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938), both for 20th Century Fox. She subsequently co-starred in \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939) opposite Don Ameche. Dissatisfied with her career in film, Stuart shifted her focus to stage acting. Between 1940 and 1942, Stuart appeared in numerous summer stock plays in New England, including a 1940 production of \"Our Town\" in which she starred alongside its playwright", "id": "19503931" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nBabes in Arms is the 1939 American film version of the 1937 Broadway musical of the same name. The film version stars Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland, and features Charles Winninger, Guy Kibbee, June Preisser, Grace Hayes, and Betty Jaynes. The film concerns a group of youngsters trying to put on a show to prove their vaudevillian parents wrong and make it to Broadway. The original Broadway script was significantly revamped, restructured, and rewritten to accommodate Hollywood's needs. In 1921, vaudeville performer Joe Moran (Winninger)", "id": "9219782" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nhim when he transferred to MGM in 1938. Turner attracted attention by playing the role of a murder victim in her first film, LeRoy's \"They Won't Forget\" (1937), and she later transitioned into featured roles, often appearing as an ingénue. During the early 1940s, Turner established herself as a leading actress and one of MGM's top performers, appearing in such films as the film noir \"Johnny Eager\" (1941); the musical \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941); the horror film", "id": "11929991" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nthe stature of most leading men. He appeared in a number of films, including \"Words and Music\" in 1948, which paired him for the last time with Garland on film (he appeared with her on one episode as a guest on \"The Judy Garland Show\"). He briefly starred in a CBS radio series, \"Shorty Bell\", in the summer of 1948, and reprised his role as \"Andy Hardy\", with most of the original cast, in a syndicated radio version of \"The", "id": "5690276" }, { "contents": "Donna Reed\n\n\nmany starlets at MGM, she played Mickey Rooney's love interest in an Andy Hardy film, in her case the hugely popular \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942). She was second billed in a children's film, \"Mokey\" (1942). Reed played a love interest in \"Calling Dr. Gillespie\" (1942) and \"Apache Trail\" (1942), then did a thriller with Edward Arnold, \"Eyes in the Night\" (1942), directed by Fred Zinnemann. Reed had", "id": "13840841" }, { "contents": "Evalyn Knapp\n\n\nHis Private Secretary\", a light comedy in which Wayne portrays a suit-and-tie wearing playboy determined to win her over. She also appeared in \"Corruption\" that year opposite Preston Foster. One of her better known film roles was opposite Ken Maynard in the 1934 film \"In Old Santa Fe\" featuring Gene Autry in his first screen appearance, in which he sang with a bluegrass band. She worked through 1941, but her career slowed afterward. In 1943, she played her last role, uncredited,", "id": "560741" }, { "contents": "Kathryn Grayson\n\n\nexercise. Within a year, Grayson had her first screen test. However, the studio executives were not satisfied, and she went through a further six months of lessons until she made her first film appearance in 1941's \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" as the character's secretary Kathryn Land. In the film, she takes part in three musical numbers. Two further films were planned for Grayson in 1941; \"White House Girl\", which was later made in 1948 with Durbin, and \"Very Warm for May", "id": "20045432" }, { "contents": "Susi Nicoletti\n\n\nSusi Nicoletti (3 September 1918 – 5 June 2005) was a Bavarian-born actress best remembered today for over 100 supporting roles mostly in comedy films. She was born as Susanne Emilie Luise Adele Habersack in Munich, but spent most of her childhood with her parents in Amsterdam. Back in Munich, she made her stage debut at age 13. Two years later she became a ballerina. In the early 1930s she turned to cabaret. In 1939, she was offered her first film role. In 1940 she moved to", "id": "6091110" }, { "contents": "Dorothy Morris\n\n\nShe did a screen test for the female lead in \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942), but lost to Donna Reed. Appearing in bit parts in several of the studio's more successful films, Morris was signed to a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract in 1941. For one of her early film roles, \"Cry 'Havoc'\" (1943), she affected a British accent. Her next picture was the well-received drama \"The Human Comedy\", which featured a star cast,", "id": "323808" }, { "contents": "The Courtship of Andy Hardy\n\n\nThe Courtship of Andy Hardy is a 1942 film, part of the Andy Hardy series. It gave an early role to Donna Reed although Mickey Rooney had lobbied for his then-wife Ava Gardner to have her part. Within a few months of the film's release, she filed for divorce. This was the 12th entry in the long-running \"Andy Hardy\" series of sixteen. When Carvel teenager and new tow truck-owner Andy Hardy is stopped by a policeman for driving without a license plate, a radio", "id": "20736523" }, { "contents": "Mae Busch\n\n\nMae Busch (18 June 1891 – 20 April 1946) was an Australian-born actress who worked in both silent and sound films in early Hollywood. In the latter part of her career she appeared in many Laurel and Hardy comedies, where she frequently played Hardy's shrewish wife. Mae Busch was born Annie May Busch in Melbourne, Victoria to popular Australian vaudeville performers Elizabeth Maria Lay and Frederick William Busch. Her mother had been active since 1883 under the stage names \"Dora Devere\" and then \"Dora Busch\";", "id": "10830566" }, { "contents": "Hannelore Schroth\n\n\ndebut at the age of nine in 1931's Max Ophüls' comedy \"Dann schon lieber Lebertran\" opposite her mother. Until age sixteen she attended drama school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Her early film successes include \"Spiel im Sommerwind\" (1938), \"Weisser Flieder\" (1939) and \"Kitty und die Weltkonferenz\" (1939) - the latter of which was her first leading role. During World War II, Hannelore Schroth continued performing in films. Unlike her father, Heinrich Schroth, who was by", "id": "16153872" }, { "contents": "Lupe Vélez\n\n\npopular actress, RKO Pictures did not renew her contract in 1934. Over the next few years, Vélez worked for various studio as a freelance actress; she also spent two years in England where she filmed \"The Morals of Marcus\" and \"Gypsy Melody\" (both 1936). She returned to Los Angeles the following year where she appeared in the final part of the Wheeler & Woolsey comedy \"High Flyers\" (1937). Vélez made her final appearance on Broadway in the 1938 musical \"You Never Know\"", "id": "20716058" }, { "contents": "Katharine Kavanaugh\n\n\nher biggest claims to fame was helping to create the Jones Family characters, who would appear in 17 low-budget films between 1936 and 1940. The first film in the series, \"Every Saturday Night\", was released in 1936, and Kavanaugh would also co-write \"Educating Father\", released later that same year. While her screenwriting career cooled in the late 1930s, she continued writing plays that were produced in the Los Angeles area until her death in 1942. She and her husband, Oliver Ziegfeld (", "id": "21036559" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\n, including \"The Wizard of Oz\" and \"Babes in Arms\". She was the fourth person to receive the award as well as only one of twelve in history to ever be presented with one. Garland starred in three films released in 1940: \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\", \"Strike Up the Band\", and \"Little Nellie Kelly\". In the last, she played her first adult role, a dual role of both mother and daughter. \"Little Nellie Kelly\" was purchased from George M.", "id": "13593089" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nliving on her own. In late 1949 Hardi and her husband moved to Jakarta. Two years later she made her feature film debut in a bit role in the Produksi Film Negara (PFN; State Film Corporation)'s \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". The following year she took a starring role in another PFN film, \"Si Pintjang\", portraying an old woman; as she was only twenty-four, she was artificially aged with make-up. That same year she appeared as the lead love interest in", "id": "15623084" }, { "contents": "Jane Frazee\n\n\nB film \"Melody and Moonlight\" (1940) for Republic Pictures. Shortly after the film's release she was signed by Universal Pictures and was featured in \"Buck Privates\", the high-grossing 1941 comedy/World War II film starring Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The strong impression she made in that film elevated her to leading-lady roles in Universal's popular \"B\" musicals, usually appearing opposite Robert Paige. She left Universal in late 1942, when she married actor-director Glenn Tryon, who", "id": "11708629" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\n\n\nAndy Hardy Meets Debutante is a 1940 American romantic comedy film directed by George B. Seitz. The film stars Lewis Stone, Mickey Rooney, Cecilia Parker, Fay Holden and Judy Garland. It is the ninth of the \"Andy Hardy\" full-length film series. Andy Hardy (Mickey Rooney) from Carvel becomes infatuated with a well-known young socialite, Daphne Fowler (Diana Lewis), from New York City. Even though he hasn’t met the woman in person, he drops her name to his friends and", "id": "11382757" }, { "contents": "Martha Vickers\n\n\nplayed minor roles in several films during the early 1940s, working first at Universal Studios and then at RKO Pictures. She next went to Warner Bros., where \"they gave her the star push, rearranging her surname to 'Vickers.'\" Her work there included the role of Carmen Sternwood, the promiscuous, drug-addicted younger sister of Lauren Bacall's character in \"The Big Sleep\" (1946). She also starred in a musical, \"The Time, the Place and the Girl\", followed by", "id": "721594" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nwas over, she was summoned back to work and ultimately performed two songs as a guest in the Rodgers and Hart biopic \"Words and Music\" (1948), which was her last appearance with Mickey Rooney. Despite the all-star cast, \"Words and Music\" barely broke even at the box office. Having regained her strength, as well as some needed weight during her suspension, Garland felt much better and in the fall of 1948, she returned to MGM to replace a pregnant June Allyson for the musical", "id": "13593101" }, { "contents": "Martha O'Driscoll\n\n\n's Dangerous\" (1937), she was not credited by name. In the Deanna Durbin vehicle \"Mad About Music\" (1937), she was billed as \"pretty girl.\" Her face appeared on such advertisements as Charm-Kurl Supreme Cold Wave and Max Factor Hollywood Face Powder. Universal lent O'Driscoll to MGM for parts in \"The Secret of Dr Kildare\" (1939) and \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1940), starring Mickey Rooney. RKO, however, gave O'Driscoll her first two starring", "id": "20196774" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nMarlia Hardi (also Marlia Hardy; 10 March 192718 June 1984) was an Indonesian film actress active from 1951 to 1983. Born in the Central Javan city of Magelang, she took to the stage in the 1940s before moving to Jakarta in 1949. Two years later she made her feature film debut in \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". Over the next two decades she appeared in over seventy films, became recognized for her depictions of mothers, and received the Citra Award for Best Supporting Actress. Despite her productiveness, however", "id": "15623082" }, { "contents": "Susan Peters\n\n\nLos Angeles. After completing filming of the comedy \"Andy Hardy's Double Life\" (1942) in which she had a lead role, Mervyn LeRoy cast Peters in the drama \"Random Harvest\", in which she portrayed a young woman who falls in love with her step-uncle. The film was one of the top 25 highest-earning films of the year, and Peters's performance garnered her critical acclaim, earning her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. The success of \"Random Harvest\" led", "id": "17519590" }, { "contents": "Paulette Goddard\n\n\nshe appeared as an uncredited extra in two films, the Laurel and Hardy short film \"Berth Marks\" (1929), and George Fitzmaurice's drama \"The Locked Door\" (1929). Following her divorce, she briefly visited Europe before returning to Hollywood in late 1930 with her mother. Her second attempt at acting was no more successful than the first, as she landed work only as an extra. In 1930, she signed her first film contract with producer Samuel Goldwyn to appear as a Goldwyn Girl in \"", "id": "3980436" }, { "contents": "Trixie Friganza\n\n\nTrixie Friganza (born Delia O'Callaghan; November 29, 1870 – February 27, 1955) began her career as an operetta soubrette, working her way from the chorus to starring in musical comedies to having her own feature act on the vaudeville circuit. She transitioned to film in the early 1920s mostly playing small characters that were quirky and comedic and retired from the stage in 1940 due to health concerns. She spent her last years teaching drama to young women in a convent school and when she died she left everything to the convent", "id": "13928014" }, { "contents": "Susan Hayward\n\n\nSusan Hayward (born Edythe Marrenner; June 30, 1917 – March 14, 1975) was an American actress and model. After working as a fashion model, Hayward traveled to Hollywood in 1937. She secured a film contract and played several small supporting roles over the next few years. By the late 1940s, the quality of her film roles had improved, and she achieved recognition for her dramatic abilities with the first of five Academy Award nominations for Best Actress for her performance as an alcoholic in \"Smash-Up,", "id": "14143916" }, { "contents": "Nella Walker\n\n\nyear to 1938, she had 23 film appearances. Her biggest film appearance during this period was in \"Young Dr. Kildare\" with Lionel Barrymore and Lew Ayres. Throughout the 1930s, her career was strong, and despite never being a premier star, she repeatedly had solid acting roles. She finished the decade strongly in 1939 with nine film roles, only three of which were uncredited. The 1940s mirrored her success of the previous decade in many ways, with appearances in 37 films from 1940 to 1947. Later in her", "id": "4686869" }, { "contents": "May Wallace\n\n\nMay Wallace (August 23, 1877 – December 11, 1938) was an American film actress. She appeared in 63 films between 1914 and 1939. Wallace was born in Russiaville, Indiana and died in Los Angeles, California, where she worked in Hollywood as a film actress. She often played supporting roles for producer Hal Roach in his Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang comedies, mostly in maternal roles. Wallace was married to Thomas W. Maddox until her death, they had one daughter and one son. She died of", "id": "9169980" }, { "contents": "Ora Carew\n\n\na film editor. Ora's birth year has been listed as 1893, on her death certificate and is also what her grave says, but Utah birth index and the 1900 census indicate 1891. She was educated by private tutors and at Roland Hall Seminary. After her father died on June 19, 1896, her mother moved with her three children to California. Her screen career began with MGM, following numerous engagements in vaudeville, musical comedy and stock. Some of her most notable films with MGM were \"Go West,", "id": "19207733" }, { "contents": "Eilene Janssen\n\n\nMary Eilene Janssen (born May 25, 1938), is a retired American film and television actress. Eilene Janssen was born in Los Angeles, California on May 25, 1938, to parents Henry Janssen and Mary Ellen Thompson. She began her film career as a child actress in the early 1940s. With her father being a longtime worker for Universal Studios, Eilene Janssen made her first screen appearance in the 1940 film \"Sandy Gets Her Man\". She continued to have bit parts in several movies such as \"Two", "id": "12362318" }, { "contents": "Ann Rutherford\n\n\nLouis Mayer originally refused the loan because he considered the role too minor, but Rutherford passionately appealed to him to change his mind. In December 1939, while promoting the new movie, Rutherford visited six Confederate Army veterans at the Confederate Soldiers Home near Atlanta. One of the veterans gave Rutherford a rose corsage tied with Confederate colors. From 1937 until 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. Her first film in this series was \"You're Only Young Once\"", "id": "6472820" }, { "contents": "Gloria Stuart\n\n\nMan\" (1933), followed by roles in the Shirley Temple musicals \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936) and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938). She also starred as Queen Anne in the musical comedy \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939). Beginning in 1940, Stuart slowed her film career, instead performing in regional theater in New England. In 1945, following a tenure as a contract player for Twentieth Century Fox, Stuart abandoned her acting career and shifted to a career as an artist", "id": "3454792" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nand Judy Garland in the Andy Hardy film \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938). During the shoot, Turner completed her studies with an educational social worker, allowing her to graduate high school that year. The film was a box-office success, and her appearance in it as a flirtatious high school student convinced studio head Louis B. Mayer that Turner could be the next Jean Harlow, a sex symbol who had died six months before Turner's arrival at MGM. Mayer helped further Turner's career by giving her", "id": "11930007" }, { "contents": "Linda Darnell\n\n\nLinda Darnell (born Monetta Eloyse Darnell, October 16, 1923April 10, 1965) was an American film actress. Darnell progressed from modeling as a child to acting in theater and film. At the encouragement of her mother, she made her first film in 1939, and appeared in supporting roles in big-budget films for 20th Century Fox throughout the 1940s. She rose to fame with co-starring roles opposite Tyrone Power in adventure films, and established a main character career after her role in \"Forever Amber\" (", "id": "9752181" }, { "contents": "Marcia Mae Jones\n\n\nsigned her to co-star with Jackie Moran in a few rustic romances; when this series lapsed, both Jones and Moran joined Monogram's popular action-comedy series starring Frankie Darro. As a young adult, she continued to work in motion pictures, notably in \"Nine Girls\" (1944) and \"Arson, Inc.\" (1948). Like many familiar faces of the 1940s, she appeared on numerous television programs. In 1951 she appeared as comic foil to Buster Keaton in Keaton's filmed TV series.", "id": "5963847" }, { "contents": "Peggy Drake\n\n\nPeggy Drake (6 October 1922 – 19 September 2014), was an Austrian film and television actress. She primarily appeared in B-movies of the 1940s. Born Lieselotte Mayer in Vienna, Austria, she moved to the United States with her family at the age of three. Her acting career started with an uncredited role in the film \"Too Many Girls\" (1940). Her career was short-lived, appearing in five films between 1940 and 1942, most notably in the serial film \"King of the", "id": "8901594" }, { "contents": "Signe Hasso\n\n\nfilm in Sweden. In 1933, she made her first film, \"Tystnadens hus\", with German film director/cameraman Harry Hasso, whom she married the same year. They had a son by the time she was 19. They divorced in 1941. In 1940, she moved to the United States, where she signed a contract with RKO Pictures, who promoted her as \"the next Garbo\". With few RKO roles forthcoming, she turned to the stage to make a living. According to the Internet Broadway", "id": "19347089" }, { "contents": "Rita La Roy\n\n\nand the \"cobra dance\" in which her feet and legs were tied together under a stylized snakeskin so that she danced by undulating her torso.\" In 1929, she made her film debut in \"The Delightful Rogue\", starring opposite matinee idol Rod La Rocque. Over the next several years, working as part of the RKO Radio Pictures stable, she appeared in both starring and supporting roles. While her final significant role was in the 1940 comedy-mystery \"Hold That Woman!\", she had several small", "id": "13534727" }, { "contents": "Elizabeth Taylor\n\n\nto socially prominent American parents, Taylor moved with her family to Los Angeles in 1939. She made her acting debut in a minor role in the Universal Pictures film \"There's One Born Every Minute\" (1942) but the studio ended her contract after a year. She was then signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and became a popular teen star after appearing in \"National Velvet\" (1944). She transitioned to more mature roles in the 1950s, when she starred in the comedy \"Father of the", "id": "19979789" }, { "contents": "Karin Booth\n\n\nKarin Booth (born June Francis Hoffman, June 19, 1916 – July 27, 2003) was an American film and TV actress of the 1940s to 1960s. She was born June Francis Hoffman on June 19, 1916, in Minneapolis, Minnesota to Francis T. and Ebba V. Hoffman. She lived in Portland and Los Angeles, attending John Marshall High School. She began her career modeling and being a chorus girl in 1939 and was signed under contract to Paramount Pictures in 1941 under the name Katharine Booth. After changing her", "id": "1386964" }, { "contents": "Saranya Ponvannan\n\n\ndebut in Mani Ratnam's production \"Nayakan,\" as the female lead opposite Kamal Haasan in 1987. She made her first Telugu appearance in 1988 film \"Neerajanam;\" her Malayalam debut was a year later in the 1989 film \"Artham\" starring opposite Mamooty. In 1996 almost during the end of her career as a lead actress she debuted in Kannada cinema in \"Appaji\". After marriage in 1995, she semi retired from acting. In 2000 she appeared playing the lead role in the comedy television series, \"", "id": "2557700" }, { "contents": "Franciska Gaal\n\n\n\", opposite Fredric March. She followed this with the comedy \"The Girl Downstairs\" (1938) with Franchot Tone, a remake of her Austrian success \"Catherine the Last\". In 1939, Gaal co-starred with Bing Crosby in the musical \"Paris Honeymoon\". She returned to Hungary in 1940 because of her mother's illness and remained there for the duration of World War II. In 1946, she began work on a new film in Budapest the Soviet-backed \"Renee XIV\" but filming was", "id": "19308441" }, { "contents": "Jo Ann Sayers\n\n\nstudent production and invited her to Hollywood for a screen test. She was offered a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her first credited film role was in 1938. In 1940, she was selected for the titular role in the Broadway production of \"My Sister Eileen\", opposite Shirley Booth, who was two decades Sayers' senior, which opened on December 26, 1940. She remained in the Broadway cast until June 1942, when she left to marry Anthony A. Bliss (1913-1991), a New", "id": "6389492" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nstar Baby Rosalie Essex (June Preisser), but Mickey gets in a fight with Jeff. Mickey tells Judge Black that his parents' show flopped. The judge gives Mickey 30 days to pay damages. Don and Molly sing \"Where or When\" with an orchestra of children. Mickey has a date with Baby and dines in her house. Mickey wants Baby in the show, which needs $287. She offers to pay it. Mickey smokes a cigar and leaves sick. Mickey tells Patsy that Baby has to play", "id": "9219785" }, { "contents": "Chela Ruiz\n\n\nChela Ruiz (5 June 1921 - 1 December 1999) was an Argentine actress. Her career spanned radio, film, television and stage, and in 1997 the Argentine Association of Actors awarded her the prestigious Premio Podestá for her theatrical work. Ruiz made her professional debut on Radio Splendid, along with her sister Nora Cullen, working as an actress and reader. In the 1940s and 1950s she was known for her narration of radio plays by Nené Cascallar. She began appearing on stage in 1942. A film career followed later", "id": "10450238" }, { "contents": "Petula Clark\n\n\nher film career in the late 1960s, starring in two big musical films. In \"Finian's Rainbow\" (1968), she starred opposite Fred Astaire and she was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for her performance. With her role, she again made history by becoming Astaire's final on-screen dance partner. The following year she was cast with Peter O'Toole in \"Goodbye, Mr. Chips\" (1969), a musical adaptation of the classic James Hilton novella", "id": "19868394" }, { "contents": "Sara Haden\n\n\n\". Haden later became a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract player in the late 1930s and had smallish roles in many of the studio's films, most notably in the Andy Hardy series starring Mickey Rooney, cast as the spinsterish Aunt Milly Forrest. Haden made her last film, \"Andy Hardy Comes Home\", in 1958, but was active on television until a 1965 guest spot on \"Dr. Kildare\". She was most notable for her stern, humorless characterisations such as a truant officer in Shirley Temple's \"", "id": "16961173" }, { "contents": "Rafaela Ottiano\n\n\n's last film was the musical comedy \"I Married an Angel\" (1942), starring Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. During her career in film, she appeared in approximately 45 motion pictures, opposite such actors as Barbara Stanwyck, Conrad Nagel, Peter Lorre, Zasu Pitts, and Katharine Hepburn. Ottiano lived in the Times Square area during the Prohibition Era and never married. She died in 1942, in the Boston home of her late parents, of intestinal cancer at the age of 54. She is buried at", "id": "9444719" }, { "contents": "Doris Davenport\n\n\nDoris Davenport, also known as Doris Jordan (January 1, 1917 – June 18, 1980) was an American film actress during the 1930s and early 1940s. Davenport was born in Moline, Illinois, but raised in Hollywood, California. She started auditioning for acting roles, and performed in her first film in 1934, titled \"Kid Millions\". From 1934 to 1939, she appeared in only five films, supporting herself by working in New York City as a fashion model between films. However, when she auditioned", "id": "2801211" }, { "contents": "Patricia Dane\n\n\nPatricia Dane (born Thelma Pearl Pippins, August 4, 1919 – June 5, 1995) was an American film actress of the 1940s. Dane was born Thelma Pearl Pippins in Blountstown, Florida and was also known as Thelma Byrnes after her stepfather. She began her career designing clothes for a New York City dress firm and was signed to an MGM contract in 1941. Dane's earliest appearances were two uncredited roles in \"Ziegfeld Girl\" and \"I'll Wait for You\" (both 1941). She played the", "id": "18013995" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\na young girl. Her new contract called for a starting salary of $75 a week and scales up to $1000 a week for the seventh year. In November 1935, Parker purchased a new home in Beverly Hills, California. The following year she joined the ballet school of Dave Gould at MGM, along with Maureen O'Sullivan. By the fall of 1936, Parker was studying singing. She played Marian Hardy in the extremely popular Andy Hardy film series in the late 1930s and early 1940s. She was in the original", "id": "18919251" }, { "contents": "Rooney Mara\n\n\nwas always afraid that I might fail.\" Her first and only role in high school was Juliet in \"Romeo and Juliet\", which she got after being signed up to audition by a friend. Mara acted in a few student films while at NYU, and then began her career in acting, first auditioning at the age of nineteen. Mara first appeared as an extra in films which starred her sister, including a bit-part in the 2005 direct-to-video horror film \"\". She found work", "id": "18311311" }, { "contents": "Georgiana Young\n\n\nBelzer and Gladys Royal. Along with her half-sisters, she was raised Roman Catholic. Young's acting career was short-lived, though she appeared in three films. Her debut role was as Berta Hubbard, sister of Mabel Gardiner Hubbard, in Irving Cummings's 1939 biographical film \"The Story of Alexander Graham Bell\", opposite her sisters Loretta (as Mabel), Sally, and Polly Ann. She would later have bit parts in two other films: \"No, No, Nanette\" (1940)", "id": "6269969" }, { "contents": "Glikeriya Bogdanova-Chesnokova\n\n\nmedals for her service. Following the war, in 1946, Bogdanova-Chesnokova returned to the Leningrad State Theatre of Musical Comedy. In 1947, she received the Stalin Prize. In the mid 1950s, Bogdanova-Chesnokova performed during three circus seasons with the clown, The act involved acrobatic actions. In 1955, Bogdanova-Chesnokova made her first significant film appearance. She played Maria Mikhailovna in the comedy film \"Tamer of Tigers\". Generally, Bogdanova-Chesnokova was a character actress taking supporting roles. However, in", "id": "5458931" }, { "contents": "Judi West\n\n\nJudi West (born December 15, 1942) is an American actress, best known for her supporting role opposite Jack Lemmon in the 1966 comedy film \"The Fortune Cookie. Judi West acted in a few films in the 1960s and also appeared in television in the 1960s through the early 1980s. Her notable film appearances include: She had earlier worked on the Broadway stage including \"A Family Affair\" (1962) and \"She Loves Me\" (1963-1964). Married from 1971 to 1989 to actor John Rubinstein", "id": "5957659" }, { "contents": "Judy Holliday\n\n\nJudy Holliday (born Judith Tuvim, June 21, 1921 – June 7, 1965) was an American actress, comedian, and singer. She began her career as part of a nightclub act before working in Broadway plays and musicals. Her success in the 1946 stage production of \"Born Yesterday\" as Billie Dawn led to her being cast in the 1950 film version for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. She appeared in several films", "id": "15453399" }, { "contents": "Elena Lucena\n\n\nMaría Elena Lucena Arcuri (25 September 1914 – 7 October 2015) was an Argentine film actress of the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema (1940–60). She began her career in radio in the 1930s and reached her greatest success with the role of \"Chimbela\", which was later depicted in film, theater and television. Her extensive film career includes approximately 50 films, including notable performances in \"Chimbela\" (1939) and \"Una noche cualquiera\" (1951). During the 1940s she participated in films with comedians", "id": "16119436" }, { "contents": "Florence Nash\n\n\nLynch in \"Within the Law\". She was a noted theater actor and comedian in vaudeville until the 1930s (appearing in sketches including \"In 1999\"), when she moved to Hollywood to try her luck with films. Her most notable role was as \"Nancy Blake\" in the 1939 MGM blockbuster \"The Women\". She also was the author of a book of verse, \"June Dusk\", published in 1918. After her retirement from acting in 1939, she spent the next decade living comfortably in", "id": "6401074" }, { "contents": "Doris Nolan\n\n\nher jitters, the show was a success and Nolan got positive reviews. When Nolan left the play, Woods sent her back to Hollywood, getting her a contract with Universal Pictures. She continued to move back and forth between movies and theater throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Her most prominent film appearance was in the 1938 version of \"Holiday\", where she played alongside Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Her subsequent film roles went downhill, but she reinvigorated her Broadway career with an 18-month stint in \"The Doughgirls\",", "id": "14779965" }, { "contents": "Marjorie Stapp\n\n\nMarjorie Stapp (September 17, 1921 – June 2, 2014), was an American actress who was mainly in low-budget pictures. Stapp began her film career when she signed a contract with the film studio 20th Century-Fox in the 1940s. Her first screen appearance was in \"The Kid from Brooklyn\", a 1946 film starring Danny Kaye. This was followed by another minor appearance in \"Linda, Be Good\" (1947). Eventually, she landed a leading role in the Western movie \"The", "id": "3140505" }, { "contents": "Roshini (actress)\n\n\nRoshini is an Indian film actress who has worked in the Telugu and Tamil film industries. She is the younger sister actress Jyothika and half sister to Nagma. After getting a recommendation by her sister Nagma, Roshini made her acting debut in Selva's comedy film \"Sishya\", where she played the lead role alongside Karthik. She subsequently starred in \"Master\" (1997), opposite Chiranjeevi. Roshini was keen to accept performance-orientated roles and turned down several offers in late 1997 to be a part of films in", "id": "12724581" }, { "contents": "Lola Albright\n\n\nmotion picture debut with a small singing role in the 1947 musical comedy \"The Unfinished Dance\" and then appeared the following year in two Judy Garland movies: \"The Pirate\" and \"Easter Parade\". She first gained studio and public notice in the 1949 film noir production \"Champion\" with her portrayal of the wife of a manipulative boxing manager; she falls for a prizefighter played by Kirk Douglas. For the next several years, she appeared in secondary roles in over 20 films, including several B westerns. Among", "id": "18089616" }, { "contents": "Marika Rökk\n\n\nthe 1930s and 1940s. She had the technical skill and glamour to carry off the formulaic plots and dialogue and provide German audiences with a home grown star to rival the popular American actresses. \"Der Bettelstudent\" and \"Gasparone\", followed by \"Hello Janine!\" in 1939, all starred her together with Johannes Heesters and established them as the \"dream couple\" of the musical comedy genre. In her appearances she cultivated her \"magyar\" accent conveying a notion of \"paprika\" exoticism. Her films, which", "id": "9061566" }, { "contents": "Fay Wray\n\n\nShe continued to star in various films, including \"The Richest Girl in the World\", a second film with Joel McCrea, but by the early 1940s, her appearances became less frequent. She retired from acting in 1942 after her second marriage but due to financial exigencies soon resumed her acting career, and over the next three decades, Wray appeared in several films and also frequently on television. Wray was cast in the 1953-54 ABC situation comedy \"The Pride of the Family\" as Catherine Morrison. Paul Hartman", "id": "10781506" }, { "contents": "Margaret O'Brien\n\n\n(1944), opposite Judy Garland. As Tootie Smith, the feisty but fragile little sister of Judy Garland, she was a bright point in a very good film, especially in her musical numbers with Garland and during a Halloween sequence in which she confronts a grouchy neighbor. For her performance, she was awarded a special juvenile Oscar in 1944. Margaret and June Allyson were known as \"The Town Criers\" of MGM. \"We were always in competition: I wanted to cry better than June, and June wanted", "id": "7504217" }, { "contents": "Ann Sothern\n\n\nSothern appeared in two musical films in 1948, \"April Showers\" opposite Jack Carson and \"Words and Music\" starring an all-star cast of MGM actors, singers and dancers. In 1949, she appeared in the Academy Award-winning film \"A Letter to Three Wives\" for 20th Century Fox. Sothern received excellent reviews for her performance but the acclaim failed to stimulate her career, which had begun to wane in the late 1940s. In 1949, Sothern contracted hepatitis which she would battle for the next three", "id": "2026182" }, { "contents": "Jane Isbell\n\n\nWar soldier who once saved the life of Andrew Jackson. Clark Isbell's father was also a cousin of Alabama Governor William J. Samford. The Isbells moved to Los Angeles when Jane was an infant. The elder of two sisters, she began modeling and appearing as an extra in films when only four years old. In 1932, she made her first Mickey McGuire comedy starring Mickey Rooney and would eventually make five films in the Mickey McGuire series, similar to the Our Gang films. She grew up with child stars for playmates", "id": "12640286" }, { "contents": "Shirley Palmer (actress)\n\n\n1930 she appeared with Dorothy Sebastian and Neil Hamilton in \"Ladies Must Play\", her only film of that year. In 1932 she appeared in \"This Sporting Age\", and in 1933 she starred in probably her most recognizable role, starring opposite John Wayne in \"Somewhere in Sonora\". It would be her last credited role. She had two uncredited roles following that film, one the same year and the other in 1934, after which her career ended. She married once, to writer John Collier, and", "id": "3797930" }, { "contents": "Betty Grable\n\n\n(1930), starring Eddie Cantor. Although she received no on-screen credit for her performance, she led the film's opening musical number, entitled \"Cowboys\". In 1932, she signed a contract with RKO Radio Pictures, and she was assigned to a succession of acting, singing, and dancing classes at the studio's drama school. Her first film for the studio, \"Probation\" (1932), provided the 14-year-old Grable with her first credited screen role. Over the next few years", "id": "17559458" }, { "contents": "Erika Jayne\n\n\n, and pink.\" Soon after she gave birth to a son, Thomas Zizzo, Jr. After the couple divorced a few years later, she relocated to Los Angeles to pursue her dream of becoming a singer and performer. Early in her career, Girardi worked as a waitress to support herself between acting jobs. Girardi began her acting career in the early 1990s by appearing in small roles in several American television series and films. Her first on-screen appearance was a role as Suzanne Morton in the episode \"Prescription for", "id": "22006264" }, { "contents": "Thelma Scott\n\n\nThelma Scott (17 June 1913 – 23 November 2006) was an Australian character actress and television director whose 70-year career in theatre, radio, film and Australian television made her one of her country's most recognizable and beloved personalities. Having started her career in the early 1930s in theatre and film productions, she became one of the nation's biggest radio performers, during the 1940s featuring in productions such as \"Big Sister\" and \"Blue Hills\". She returned to made for TV films in the early late 1950s and", "id": "7852633" } ]
June Preisser ( June 26 , 1920 -- September 19 , 1984 ) was an American actress , briefly popular in musical films during the late 1930s and early 1940s , many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat . Born in New Orleans , Louisiana , Preisser was one of six children , and was an underweight baby . Her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age , in an attempt to build her strength . There she , and her sister Cherry , learnt acrobatics . Their mother was keen to have them follow a career in showbusiness , especially when their father died suddenly , leaving the family with few options to make a living . When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home , and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville , and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936 . The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States , and also performed in Europe , most notably for . Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage , and June was signed to a film contract by . Her first film Dancing Co-Ed ( 1939 ) provided only a small part , but her next film , [START_ENT] Babes in Arms [END_ENT] ( 1939 ) , gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland . She performed with Rooney and Garland again in Strike Up the Band ( 1940 ) , and with Rooney in two " Andy Hardy " films , Judge Hardy and Son ( 1939 ) and Andy Hardy 's Private Secretary ( 1941 ) . Gallant Sons ( 1940 ) placed her in a comedic murder mystery , and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in ( 1941 ) , and followed this with Sweater Girl ( 1942 ) , opposite Eddie Bracken . She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry , and the birth of a son , Ricky . By this time , MGM had little interest in promoting her , and she left to work for Monogram Pictures . She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years , and played the character " Dodie Rogers " in seven " high school " comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948 . Her final film was ( 1948 ) , and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of Annie Get Your Gun
57506cb6-a057-4311-918b-6e0515e8be16_June_Preisse:4
[{"answer": "Babes in Arms (film)", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "9112052", "title": "Babes in Arms (film)"}]}]
[ { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n, and June was signed to a film contract by MGM. Her first film, \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), provided only a small part, but her next film, \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. She performed with Rooney and Garland again in \"Strike Up the Band\" (1940), and with Rooney in two \"Andy Hardy\" films, \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939) and \"Andy Hardy", "id": "17067760" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nJune Preisser (June 26, 1920 – September 19, 1984) was an American actress, popular in musical films during the late 1930s and through the 1940s, many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat. Born in New Orleans, Preisser was one of six children. An underweight child, her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age, in an attempt to build her strength. There she, and her sister Cherry, learned acrobatics. Their mother was keen to have them follow a career", "id": "17067758" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n's Private Secretary\" (1941). \"Gallant Sons\" (1940) placed her in a comedic murder mystery, and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in \"Henry Aldrich for President\" (1941), and followed this with \"Sweater Girl\" (1942), opposite Eddie Bracken. She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry, and the birth of a son, Ricky. By this time, MGM had little interest in promoting her, and she left to work", "id": "17067761" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nfor Monogram Pictures. She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years, and played the character \"Dodie Rogers\" in seven \"high school\" comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948. Her final film was Music Man (1948), and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of \"Annie Get Your Gun\", she retired from acting. She divorced not long after, and taught dancing and acrobatics in Los Angeles, before moving with her son to Florida. They", "id": "17067762" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nin show business, especially when their father died suddenly, leaving the family with few options to make a living. When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home, and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville, and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936. The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States, and also performed in Europe, most notably for George VI of the United Kingdom. Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage", "id": "17067759" }, { "contents": "Melody Trail\n\n\nand Prejudice\" (1940). In 1939, she played the role of Carreen O'Hara, the sister of Scarlet O'Hara, in the film \"Gone with the Wind\". From 1937 to 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. She retired from films in 1950. Rutherford died on June 11, 2012 at her home in Beverly Hills, California. \"Melody Trail\" was filmed August 21–27, 1935. The film had an operating budget of $15,075", "id": "2111015" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nHardy Family movies as a literal girl-next-door to Rooney's character Andy Hardy, in \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938), although Hardy's love interest was played by Lana Turner. They teamed as lead characters for the first time in \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), ultimately appearing in five additional films, including Hardy films \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\" (1940) and \"Life Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland stated that she, Rooney, and other young", "id": "13593082" }, { "contents": "Annie Get Your Gun (film)\n\n\n, MGM's biggest musical comedy star, was originally cast as Annie Oakley. She recorded all her songs for the soundtrack and worked for two months under the direction of Busby Berkeley and dance director Robert Alton. Berkeley and Garland had worked together previously in the late 1930s and early 1940s in a successful series of backstage musicals teaming her with fellow juvenile star Mickey Rooney. Berkeley had been fired from the Garland/Rooney musical \"Girl Crazy\" in 1943 due to personality clashes with musical director Roger Edens and for driving Garland very", "id": "13779025" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nYear for her live recording \"Judy at Carnegie Hall\" (1961). Garland began performing in vaudeville as a child with her two older sisters, and was later signed to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a teenager. Although she appeared in more than two dozen films with MGM and received acclaim for many different roles, she is often best remembered for her portrayal of Dorothy Gale in \"The Wizard of Oz\" (1939). Garland was a frequent on-screen partner of both Mickey Rooney and Gene Kelly,", "id": "13593062" }, { "contents": "Louise LaPlanche\n\n\n, portraying a gypsy girl in \"The Hunchback of Notre Dame\" in 1923. Both LaPlanche began competing in California beauty pageants. In 1939, Louise LaPlanche was crowned Miss Catalina. Her Miss Catalina win led to a film contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). She appeared in the 1940 MGM musical film, \"Strike Up the Band\", which starred Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. LaPlanche later left MGM and signed on to Paramount Studios. She was cast in several Paramount films, including 1942's", "id": "3022959" }, { "contents": "Bonita Granville\n\n\nfilm success led to Granville reprising the role in three sequels from 1938 to 1939, including \"Nancy Drew... Reporter\" (1939). As a young adult, she was once again cast in supporting roles, often in prestigious films such as \"Now, Voyager\" (1942), as well as two Andy Hardy films with Mickey Rooney, \"Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble\" (1944) and \"Love Laughs at Andy Hardy\" (1946). She is also remembered for her starring role in the World", "id": "12873960" }, { "contents": "Eve Arden\n\n\nThis was followed by roles in the crime film \"The Forgotten Woman\" (1939), and the comedy \"At the Circus\" (1939), opposite Groucho Marx, a role that would require her to perform acrobatics. In 1940, she appeared opposite Clark Gable in \"Comrade X\", followed by the drama \"Manpower\" (1941), opposite Marlene Dietrich. She also appeared in a supporting part in the Red Skelton comedy \"Whistling in the Dark\" (1941), and the romantic comedy \"", "id": "10321268" }, { "contents": "Shirley Temple\n\n\nher departure from Twentieth Century-Fox, Shirley was signed by MGM for her comeback; the studio made plans to team her with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney for the Andy Hardy series. The idea was quickly abandoned. The next idea was teaming her with Garland and Rooney for the musical \"Babes on Broadway\". Fearing that either of the latter two could easily upstage Temple, MGM replaced her with Virginia Weidler. As a result, her only film for Metro was \"Kathleen\" in 1941, a story about an", "id": "7504264" }, { "contents": "Barbara Read\n\n\ncompany. When she failed to receive any roles because of her lack of experience, she joined the Laguna Beach Players theater, where she acted in a new play each month for two years. Her first film appearance was one of the three principal girls in the 1936 comedy film \"Three Smart Girls\", which also starred Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. From 1937 through 1939, Read appeared in nine films, most notably starring in \"The Spellbinder\", opposite Lee Tracy. From 1940 through 1948, she appeared in", "id": "5406875" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy\n\n\nLife Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland's character, Betsy Booth, is an aspiring singer and she sings in the first two of these films. However, although Garland songs were planned for the final film, they were eventually dropped. Unlike Garland-Rooney films outside of the \"Andy Hardy\" series, Rooney's Hardy character is not a musician, so Garland and Rooney do not perform together in the Hardy films. Rooney played the character continuously from age 16 to 25, when he appeared in", "id": "7714497" }, { "contents": "Fay Holden\n\n\nthe depression era. Eventually they left Vancouver and moved to Hollywood. Holden appeared in 46 motion pictures between 1935 and 1958, but is best known for her recurring role as Emily Hardy, mother of Mickey Rooney's character in the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" film series. The series was enormously popular in the late 1930s and early '40s, and Holden was in 15 of the 16 Hardy movies, surpassed only by Rooney, who was in all 16. Holden is also remembered for her performance as Hazel, the mother", "id": "15552902" }, { "contents": "Margaret Early\n\n\nBrent, Bette Davis, and Fay Bainter. She later became a freelance actress and found herself working in various roles at such studios as RKO, Warner Bros., and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her other screen roles include parts in \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939), \"Strike Up The Band\" (1940), \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" (1941), and \"Stage Door Canteen\" (1943). She made her last screen appearance in \"Cinderella Jones\" (1946)", "id": "11267109" }, { "contents": "Sheila Darcy\n\n\n1935 her career had taken off, and from then until 1941 she had roles in 41 films. In most of her early films, she played the heroine in B-movies, often Westerns. Darcy's best known roles were as the female lead in cliffhangers, such as the 1939 film \"Zorro's Fighting Legion\", in which she performed opposite Reed Hadley. She also played the Dragon Lady in the serial \"Terry and the Pirates\", released in 1940. In Westerns, she often played opposite popular cowboy", "id": "21067295" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nIn 1937, Rooney made his first film alongside Judy Garland with \"Thoroughbreds Don't Cry\". Garland and Rooney became close friends as they co-starred in future films and became a successful song-and-dance team. Audiences delighted in seeing the \"playful interactions between the two stars showcase a wonderful chemistry\". Along with three of the \"Andy Hardy\" films, where she portrayed a girl attracted to Andy, they appeared together in a string of successful musicals, including \"Babes in Arms\" (1939", "id": "5690267" }, { "contents": "Brenda Marshall\n\n\nArdis Ankerson (September 29, 1915 – July 30, 1992), known as Brenda Marshall, was a Filipino-born, American film actress. Marshall made her first film appearance in the 1939 \"Espionage Agent\". The following year, she played the leading lady to Errol Flynn in \"The Sea Hawk\". After divorcing actor Richard Gaines in 1940, she married William Holden in 1941, and her own career soon slowed. She starred opposite James Cagney in \"Captains of the Clouds\" (1942).", "id": "14392731" }, { "contents": "Julie Haydon\n\n\nmade by MGM. In 1932, she signed with RKO, and her first major role came that year in \"The Conquerors\", directed by William Wellman Her most notable performance came in 1935's \"The Scoundrel\" playing opposite Noël Coward, but, despite a new contract with MGM, only a few more films were to come in her short career, including \"A Family Affair\" (1937), the initial movie in the Andy Hardy series. Some have held that it was Haydon and not Fay Wray who", "id": "19690260" }, { "contents": "Jean Darling\n\n\nAssociation. She turned down an offer to appear alongside Mickey Rooney in one of the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" movies, and went on Broadway, making her debut in the musical \"Count Me In\" in 1942. Darling's stage career hit a real high when she landed the role of Carrie Pipperidge in the original Broadway production of \"Carousel\" in 1945. She appeared in 850 consecutive performances. Her role as Carrie Pipperidge helped her with parts for radio and TV in the 1950s. She hosted her own television show", "id": "1616169" }, { "contents": "List of Lana Turner performances\n\n\nLana Turner was an American actress who appeared in over fifty films during her career, which spanned four decades. Discovered in 1937 at age 16, she signed a contract with Warner Bros. and appeared in several films for the studio before signing a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The studio's co-founder, Louis B. Mayer, helped further her career by casting her in several youth-oriented comedies and musicals, including \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941),", "id": "7891475" }, { "contents": "Marguerite Chapman\n\n\ncontract to Warner Brothers in 1941, and then with Columbia from 1942 to 1948. She made her film debut in 1940, working for the next two years in small roles. In 1942, her big break came with Republic Pictures when she was cast in the leading female role in the twelve-part adventure film serial \"Spy Smasher\", a production that has been ranked among the best serials ever made. Chapman soon began receiving more leading roles and appeared opposite important stars such as Edward G. Robinson and George Sanders.", "id": "2722471" }, { "contents": "Jeanne Cagney\n\n\nRKO Pictures. However, she signed a long-term contract with Paramount Pictures. She appeared in 19 films between 1939 and 1965, including four films with her brother James: \"Yankee Doodle Dandy\" (1942), \"The Time of Your Life\" (1948), \"A Lion Is in the Streets\" (1953), and \"Man of a Thousand Faces\" (1957). Cagney gave a noted performance opposite Mickey Rooney in the film noir crime film \"Quicksand\" (1950). Cagney", "id": "6954933" }, { "contents": "Little Annie Rooney (1925 film)\n\n\nLittle Annie Rooney is a 1925 American silent comedy-drama film starring Mary Pickford and directed by William Beaudine. Pickford, one of the most successful actresses of the silent era, was best known throughout her career for her iconic portrayals of penniless young girls. After generating only modest box office revenue playing adults in her previous two films, Pickford wrote and produced \"Little Annie Rooney\" to cater to silent film audiences. Though she was 33 years old, Pickford played the title role, an Irish girl living in the slums", "id": "236551" }, { "contents": "Edith Barrett\n\n\n, she married leading man Vincent Price in 1938. The marriage ended in 1948. She and Price had one son, author/poet and environmental activist Vincent Barrett Price (born 1940). Her biggest Broadway success was as star of the now-obscure production \"Mrs. Moonlight\". In her first film, \"Ladies in Retirement\" (1941), she played one of the two half-witted half-sisters of Ida Lupino's homicidal character. Her best remembered movie role is possibly Mrs. Holland's mother-", "id": "18853813" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\nHardy film, \"A Family Affair\", in 1937. Mickey Rooney played Andy Hardy in the series, supported by Lewis Stone, Ann Rutherford, and Fay Holden. The movies were directed by George B. Seitz. Parker's character, Marion, appeared in most of the films, and her romances were a recurring feature of the series. Though she and the character she played were absent from the last two Andy Hardy films of the 1940s, Parker came out of retirement to play Marian Hardy in one more movie,", "id": "18919252" }, { "contents": "Nancy Walker\n\n\nrole provided Walker with her film debut when she signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to make a movie version, starring Lucille Ball (filmed in 1943). In 1943, she also appeared with Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in the second film version of \"Girl Crazy\". Her next film, \"Broadway Rhythm\", in which she had a featured musical number backed by Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra, \"Milkman, Keep Those Bottles Quiet\", ended Walker's contract with Metro. Her dry comic", "id": "9657966" }, { "contents": "List of Gloria Stuart performances\n\n\nstarred in two films opposite Shirley Temple: \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936), and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938), both for 20th Century Fox. She subsequently co-starred in \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939) opposite Don Ameche. Dissatisfied with her career in film, Stuart shifted her focus to stage acting. Between 1940 and 1942, Stuart appeared in numerous summer stock plays in New England, including a 1940 production of \"Our Town\" in which she starred alongside its playwright", "id": "19503931" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nBabes in Arms is the 1939 American film version of the 1937 Broadway musical of the same name. The film version stars Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland, and features Charles Winninger, Guy Kibbee, June Preisser, Grace Hayes, and Betty Jaynes. The film concerns a group of youngsters trying to put on a show to prove their vaudevillian parents wrong and make it to Broadway. The original Broadway script was significantly revamped, restructured, and rewritten to accommodate Hollywood's needs. In 1921, vaudeville performer Joe Moran (Winninger)", "id": "9219782" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nhim when he transferred to MGM in 1938. Turner attracted attention by playing the role of a murder victim in her first film, LeRoy's \"They Won't Forget\" (1937), and she later transitioned into featured roles, often appearing as an ingénue. During the early 1940s, Turner established herself as a leading actress and one of MGM's top performers, appearing in such films as the film noir \"Johnny Eager\" (1941); the musical \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941); the horror film", "id": "11929991" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nthe stature of most leading men. He appeared in a number of films, including \"Words and Music\" in 1948, which paired him for the last time with Garland on film (he appeared with her on one episode as a guest on \"The Judy Garland Show\"). He briefly starred in a CBS radio series, \"Shorty Bell\", in the summer of 1948, and reprised his role as \"Andy Hardy\", with most of the original cast, in a syndicated radio version of \"The", "id": "5690276" }, { "contents": "Donna Reed\n\n\nmany starlets at MGM, she played Mickey Rooney's love interest in an Andy Hardy film, in her case the hugely popular \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942). She was second billed in a children's film, \"Mokey\" (1942). Reed played a love interest in \"Calling Dr. Gillespie\" (1942) and \"Apache Trail\" (1942), then did a thriller with Edward Arnold, \"Eyes in the Night\" (1942), directed by Fred Zinnemann. Reed had", "id": "13840841" }, { "contents": "Evalyn Knapp\n\n\nHis Private Secretary\", a light comedy in which Wayne portrays a suit-and-tie wearing playboy determined to win her over. She also appeared in \"Corruption\" that year opposite Preston Foster. One of her better known film roles was opposite Ken Maynard in the 1934 film \"In Old Santa Fe\" featuring Gene Autry in his first screen appearance, in which he sang with a bluegrass band. She worked through 1941, but her career slowed afterward. In 1943, she played her last role, uncredited,", "id": "560741" }, { "contents": "Kathryn Grayson\n\n\nexercise. Within a year, Grayson had her first screen test. However, the studio executives were not satisfied, and she went through a further six months of lessons until she made her first film appearance in 1941's \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" as the character's secretary Kathryn Land. In the film, she takes part in three musical numbers. Two further films were planned for Grayson in 1941; \"White House Girl\", which was later made in 1948 with Durbin, and \"Very Warm for May", "id": "20045432" }, { "contents": "Susi Nicoletti\n\n\nSusi Nicoletti (3 September 1918 – 5 June 2005) was a Bavarian-born actress best remembered today for over 100 supporting roles mostly in comedy films. She was born as Susanne Emilie Luise Adele Habersack in Munich, but spent most of her childhood with her parents in Amsterdam. Back in Munich, she made her stage debut at age 13. Two years later she became a ballerina. In the early 1930s she turned to cabaret. In 1939, she was offered her first film role. In 1940 she moved to", "id": "6091110" }, { "contents": "Dorothy Morris\n\n\nShe did a screen test for the female lead in \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942), but lost to Donna Reed. Appearing in bit parts in several of the studio's more successful films, Morris was signed to a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract in 1941. For one of her early film roles, \"Cry 'Havoc'\" (1943), she affected a British accent. Her next picture was the well-received drama \"The Human Comedy\", which featured a star cast,", "id": "323808" }, { "contents": "The Courtship of Andy Hardy\n\n\nThe Courtship of Andy Hardy is a 1942 film, part of the Andy Hardy series. It gave an early role to Donna Reed although Mickey Rooney had lobbied for his then-wife Ava Gardner to have her part. Within a few months of the film's release, she filed for divorce. This was the 12th entry in the long-running \"Andy Hardy\" series of sixteen. When Carvel teenager and new tow truck-owner Andy Hardy is stopped by a policeman for driving without a license plate, a radio", "id": "20736523" }, { "contents": "Mae Busch\n\n\nMae Busch (18 June 1891 – 20 April 1946) was an Australian-born actress who worked in both silent and sound films in early Hollywood. In the latter part of her career she appeared in many Laurel and Hardy comedies, where she frequently played Hardy's shrewish wife. Mae Busch was born Annie May Busch in Melbourne, Victoria to popular Australian vaudeville performers Elizabeth Maria Lay and Frederick William Busch. Her mother had been active since 1883 under the stage names \"Dora Devere\" and then \"Dora Busch\";", "id": "10830566" }, { "contents": "Hannelore Schroth\n\n\ndebut at the age of nine in 1931's Max Ophüls' comedy \"Dann schon lieber Lebertran\" opposite her mother. Until age sixteen she attended drama school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Her early film successes include \"Spiel im Sommerwind\" (1938), \"Weisser Flieder\" (1939) and \"Kitty und die Weltkonferenz\" (1939) - the latter of which was her first leading role. During World War II, Hannelore Schroth continued performing in films. Unlike her father, Heinrich Schroth, who was by", "id": "16153872" }, { "contents": "Lupe Vélez\n\n\npopular actress, RKO Pictures did not renew her contract in 1934. Over the next few years, Vélez worked for various studio as a freelance actress; she also spent two years in England where she filmed \"The Morals of Marcus\" and \"Gypsy Melody\" (both 1936). She returned to Los Angeles the following year where she appeared in the final part of the Wheeler & Woolsey comedy \"High Flyers\" (1937). Vélez made her final appearance on Broadway in the 1938 musical \"You Never Know\"", "id": "20716058" }, { "contents": "Katharine Kavanaugh\n\n\nher biggest claims to fame was helping to create the Jones Family characters, who would appear in 17 low-budget films between 1936 and 1940. The first film in the series, \"Every Saturday Night\", was released in 1936, and Kavanaugh would also co-write \"Educating Father\", released later that same year. While her screenwriting career cooled in the late 1930s, she continued writing plays that were produced in the Los Angeles area until her death in 1942. She and her husband, Oliver Ziegfeld (", "id": "21036559" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\n, including \"The Wizard of Oz\" and \"Babes in Arms\". She was the fourth person to receive the award as well as only one of twelve in history to ever be presented with one. Garland starred in three films released in 1940: \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\", \"Strike Up the Band\", and \"Little Nellie Kelly\". In the last, she played her first adult role, a dual role of both mother and daughter. \"Little Nellie Kelly\" was purchased from George M.", "id": "13593089" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nliving on her own. In late 1949 Hardi and her husband moved to Jakarta. Two years later she made her feature film debut in a bit role in the Produksi Film Negara (PFN; State Film Corporation)'s \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". The following year she took a starring role in another PFN film, \"Si Pintjang\", portraying an old woman; as she was only twenty-four, she was artificially aged with make-up. That same year she appeared as the lead love interest in", "id": "15623084" }, { "contents": "Jane Frazee\n\n\nB film \"Melody and Moonlight\" (1940) for Republic Pictures. Shortly after the film's release she was signed by Universal Pictures and was featured in \"Buck Privates\", the high-grossing 1941 comedy/World War II film starring Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The strong impression she made in that film elevated her to leading-lady roles in Universal's popular \"B\" musicals, usually appearing opposite Robert Paige. She left Universal in late 1942, when she married actor-director Glenn Tryon, who", "id": "11708629" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\n\n\nAndy Hardy Meets Debutante is a 1940 American romantic comedy film directed by George B. Seitz. The film stars Lewis Stone, Mickey Rooney, Cecilia Parker, Fay Holden and Judy Garland. It is the ninth of the \"Andy Hardy\" full-length film series. Andy Hardy (Mickey Rooney) from Carvel becomes infatuated with a well-known young socialite, Daphne Fowler (Diana Lewis), from New York City. Even though he hasn’t met the woman in person, he drops her name to his friends and", "id": "11382757" }, { "contents": "Martha Vickers\n\n\nplayed minor roles in several films during the early 1940s, working first at Universal Studios and then at RKO Pictures. She next went to Warner Bros., where \"they gave her the star push, rearranging her surname to 'Vickers.'\" Her work there included the role of Carmen Sternwood, the promiscuous, drug-addicted younger sister of Lauren Bacall's character in \"The Big Sleep\" (1946). She also starred in a musical, \"The Time, the Place and the Girl\", followed by", "id": "721594" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nwas over, she was summoned back to work and ultimately performed two songs as a guest in the Rodgers and Hart biopic \"Words and Music\" (1948), which was her last appearance with Mickey Rooney. Despite the all-star cast, \"Words and Music\" barely broke even at the box office. Having regained her strength, as well as some needed weight during her suspension, Garland felt much better and in the fall of 1948, she returned to MGM to replace a pregnant June Allyson for the musical", "id": "13593101" }, { "contents": "Martha O'Driscoll\n\n\n's Dangerous\" (1937), she was not credited by name. In the Deanna Durbin vehicle \"Mad About Music\" (1937), she was billed as \"pretty girl.\" Her face appeared on such advertisements as Charm-Kurl Supreme Cold Wave and Max Factor Hollywood Face Powder. Universal lent O'Driscoll to MGM for parts in \"The Secret of Dr Kildare\" (1939) and \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1940), starring Mickey Rooney. RKO, however, gave O'Driscoll her first two starring", "id": "20196774" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nMarlia Hardi (also Marlia Hardy; 10 March 192718 June 1984) was an Indonesian film actress active from 1951 to 1983. Born in the Central Javan city of Magelang, she took to the stage in the 1940s before moving to Jakarta in 1949. Two years later she made her feature film debut in \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". Over the next two decades she appeared in over seventy films, became recognized for her depictions of mothers, and received the Citra Award for Best Supporting Actress. Despite her productiveness, however", "id": "15623082" }, { "contents": "Susan Peters\n\n\nLos Angeles. After completing filming of the comedy \"Andy Hardy's Double Life\" (1942) in which she had a lead role, Mervyn LeRoy cast Peters in the drama \"Random Harvest\", in which she portrayed a young woman who falls in love with her step-uncle. The film was one of the top 25 highest-earning films of the year, and Peters's performance garnered her critical acclaim, earning her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. The success of \"Random Harvest\" led", "id": "17519590" }, { "contents": "Paulette Goddard\n\n\nshe appeared as an uncredited extra in two films, the Laurel and Hardy short film \"Berth Marks\" (1929), and George Fitzmaurice's drama \"The Locked Door\" (1929). Following her divorce, she briefly visited Europe before returning to Hollywood in late 1930 with her mother. Her second attempt at acting was no more successful than the first, as she landed work only as an extra. In 1930, she signed her first film contract with producer Samuel Goldwyn to appear as a Goldwyn Girl in \"", "id": "3980436" }, { "contents": "Trixie Friganza\n\n\nTrixie Friganza (born Delia O'Callaghan; November 29, 1870 – February 27, 1955) began her career as an operetta soubrette, working her way from the chorus to starring in musical comedies to having her own feature act on the vaudeville circuit. She transitioned to film in the early 1920s mostly playing small characters that were quirky and comedic and retired from the stage in 1940 due to health concerns. She spent her last years teaching drama to young women in a convent school and when she died she left everything to the convent", "id": "13928014" }, { "contents": "Susan Hayward\n\n\nSusan Hayward (born Edythe Marrenner; June 30, 1917 – March 14, 1975) was an American actress and model. After working as a fashion model, Hayward traveled to Hollywood in 1937. She secured a film contract and played several small supporting roles over the next few years. By the late 1940s, the quality of her film roles had improved, and she achieved recognition for her dramatic abilities with the first of five Academy Award nominations for Best Actress for her performance as an alcoholic in \"Smash-Up,", "id": "14143916" }, { "contents": "Nella Walker\n\n\nyear to 1938, she had 23 film appearances. Her biggest film appearance during this period was in \"Young Dr. Kildare\" with Lionel Barrymore and Lew Ayres. Throughout the 1930s, her career was strong, and despite never being a premier star, she repeatedly had solid acting roles. She finished the decade strongly in 1939 with nine film roles, only three of which were uncredited. The 1940s mirrored her success of the previous decade in many ways, with appearances in 37 films from 1940 to 1947. Later in her", "id": "4686869" }, { "contents": "May Wallace\n\n\nMay Wallace (August 23, 1877 – December 11, 1938) was an American film actress. She appeared in 63 films between 1914 and 1939. Wallace was born in Russiaville, Indiana and died in Los Angeles, California, where she worked in Hollywood as a film actress. She often played supporting roles for producer Hal Roach in his Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang comedies, mostly in maternal roles. Wallace was married to Thomas W. Maddox until her death, they had one daughter and one son. She died of", "id": "9169980" }, { "contents": "Ora Carew\n\n\na film editor. Ora's birth year has been listed as 1893, on her death certificate and is also what her grave says, but Utah birth index and the 1900 census indicate 1891. She was educated by private tutors and at Roland Hall Seminary. After her father died on June 19, 1896, her mother moved with her three children to California. Her screen career began with MGM, following numerous engagements in vaudeville, musical comedy and stock. Some of her most notable films with MGM were \"Go West,", "id": "19207733" }, { "contents": "Eilene Janssen\n\n\nMary Eilene Janssen (born May 25, 1938), is a retired American film and television actress. Eilene Janssen was born in Los Angeles, California on May 25, 1938, to parents Henry Janssen and Mary Ellen Thompson. She began her film career as a child actress in the early 1940s. With her father being a longtime worker for Universal Studios, Eilene Janssen made her first screen appearance in the 1940 film \"Sandy Gets Her Man\". She continued to have bit parts in several movies such as \"Two", "id": "12362318" }, { "contents": "Ann Rutherford\n\n\nLouis Mayer originally refused the loan because he considered the role too minor, but Rutherford passionately appealed to him to change his mind. In December 1939, while promoting the new movie, Rutherford visited six Confederate Army veterans at the Confederate Soldiers Home near Atlanta. One of the veterans gave Rutherford a rose corsage tied with Confederate colors. From 1937 until 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. Her first film in this series was \"You're Only Young Once\"", "id": "6472820" }, { "contents": "Gloria Stuart\n\n\nMan\" (1933), followed by roles in the Shirley Temple musicals \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936) and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938). She also starred as Queen Anne in the musical comedy \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939). Beginning in 1940, Stuart slowed her film career, instead performing in regional theater in New England. In 1945, following a tenure as a contract player for Twentieth Century Fox, Stuart abandoned her acting career and shifted to a career as an artist", "id": "3454792" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nand Judy Garland in the Andy Hardy film \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938). During the shoot, Turner completed her studies with an educational social worker, allowing her to graduate high school that year. The film was a box-office success, and her appearance in it as a flirtatious high school student convinced studio head Louis B. Mayer that Turner could be the next Jean Harlow, a sex symbol who had died six months before Turner's arrival at MGM. Mayer helped further Turner's career by giving her", "id": "11930007" }, { "contents": "Linda Darnell\n\n\nLinda Darnell (born Monetta Eloyse Darnell, October 16, 1923April 10, 1965) was an American film actress. Darnell progressed from modeling as a child to acting in theater and film. At the encouragement of her mother, she made her first film in 1939, and appeared in supporting roles in big-budget films for 20th Century Fox throughout the 1940s. She rose to fame with co-starring roles opposite Tyrone Power in adventure films, and established a main character career after her role in \"Forever Amber\" (", "id": "9752181" }, { "contents": "Marcia Mae Jones\n\n\nsigned her to co-star with Jackie Moran in a few rustic romances; when this series lapsed, both Jones and Moran joined Monogram's popular action-comedy series starring Frankie Darro. As a young adult, she continued to work in motion pictures, notably in \"Nine Girls\" (1944) and \"Arson, Inc.\" (1948). Like many familiar faces of the 1940s, she appeared on numerous television programs. In 1951 she appeared as comic foil to Buster Keaton in Keaton's filmed TV series.", "id": "5963847" }, { "contents": "Peggy Drake\n\n\nPeggy Drake (6 October 1922 – 19 September 2014), was an Austrian film and television actress. She primarily appeared in B-movies of the 1940s. Born Lieselotte Mayer in Vienna, Austria, she moved to the United States with her family at the age of three. Her acting career started with an uncredited role in the film \"Too Many Girls\" (1940). Her career was short-lived, appearing in five films between 1940 and 1942, most notably in the serial film \"King of the", "id": "8901594" }, { "contents": "Signe Hasso\n\n\nfilm in Sweden. In 1933, she made her first film, \"Tystnadens hus\", with German film director/cameraman Harry Hasso, whom she married the same year. They had a son by the time she was 19. They divorced in 1941. In 1940, she moved to the United States, where she signed a contract with RKO Pictures, who promoted her as \"the next Garbo\". With few RKO roles forthcoming, she turned to the stage to make a living. According to the Internet Broadway", "id": "19347089" }, { "contents": "Rita La Roy\n\n\nand the \"cobra dance\" in which her feet and legs were tied together under a stylized snakeskin so that she danced by undulating her torso.\" In 1929, she made her film debut in \"The Delightful Rogue\", starring opposite matinee idol Rod La Rocque. Over the next several years, working as part of the RKO Radio Pictures stable, she appeared in both starring and supporting roles. While her final significant role was in the 1940 comedy-mystery \"Hold That Woman!\", she had several small", "id": "13534727" }, { "contents": "Elizabeth Taylor\n\n\nto socially prominent American parents, Taylor moved with her family to Los Angeles in 1939. She made her acting debut in a minor role in the Universal Pictures film \"There's One Born Every Minute\" (1942) but the studio ended her contract after a year. She was then signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and became a popular teen star after appearing in \"National Velvet\" (1944). She transitioned to more mature roles in the 1950s, when she starred in the comedy \"Father of the", "id": "19979789" }, { "contents": "Karin Booth\n\n\nKarin Booth (born June Francis Hoffman, June 19, 1916 – July 27, 2003) was an American film and TV actress of the 1940s to 1960s. She was born June Francis Hoffman on June 19, 1916, in Minneapolis, Minnesota to Francis T. and Ebba V. Hoffman. She lived in Portland and Los Angeles, attending John Marshall High School. She began her career modeling and being a chorus girl in 1939 and was signed under contract to Paramount Pictures in 1941 under the name Katharine Booth. After changing her", "id": "1386964" }, { "contents": "Saranya Ponvannan\n\n\ndebut in Mani Ratnam's production \"Nayakan,\" as the female lead opposite Kamal Haasan in 1987. She made her first Telugu appearance in 1988 film \"Neerajanam;\" her Malayalam debut was a year later in the 1989 film \"Artham\" starring opposite Mamooty. In 1996 almost during the end of her career as a lead actress she debuted in Kannada cinema in \"Appaji\". After marriage in 1995, she semi retired from acting. In 2000 she appeared playing the lead role in the comedy television series, \"", "id": "2557700" }, { "contents": "Franciska Gaal\n\n\n\", opposite Fredric March. She followed this with the comedy \"The Girl Downstairs\" (1938) with Franchot Tone, a remake of her Austrian success \"Catherine the Last\". In 1939, Gaal co-starred with Bing Crosby in the musical \"Paris Honeymoon\". She returned to Hungary in 1940 because of her mother's illness and remained there for the duration of World War II. In 1946, she began work on a new film in Budapest the Soviet-backed \"Renee XIV\" but filming was", "id": "19308441" }, { "contents": "Jo Ann Sayers\n\n\nstudent production and invited her to Hollywood for a screen test. She was offered a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her first credited film role was in 1938. In 1940, she was selected for the titular role in the Broadway production of \"My Sister Eileen\", opposite Shirley Booth, who was two decades Sayers' senior, which opened on December 26, 1940. She remained in the Broadway cast until June 1942, when she left to marry Anthony A. Bliss (1913-1991), a New", "id": "6389492" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nstar Baby Rosalie Essex (June Preisser), but Mickey gets in a fight with Jeff. Mickey tells Judge Black that his parents' show flopped. The judge gives Mickey 30 days to pay damages. Don and Molly sing \"Where or When\" with an orchestra of children. Mickey has a date with Baby and dines in her house. Mickey wants Baby in the show, which needs $287. She offers to pay it. Mickey smokes a cigar and leaves sick. Mickey tells Patsy that Baby has to play", "id": "9219785" }, { "contents": "Chela Ruiz\n\n\nChela Ruiz (5 June 1921 - 1 December 1999) was an Argentine actress. Her career spanned radio, film, television and stage, and in 1997 the Argentine Association of Actors awarded her the prestigious Premio Podestá for her theatrical work. Ruiz made her professional debut on Radio Splendid, along with her sister Nora Cullen, working as an actress and reader. In the 1940s and 1950s she was known for her narration of radio plays by Nené Cascallar. She began appearing on stage in 1942. A film career followed later", "id": "10450238" }, { "contents": "Petula Clark\n\n\nher film career in the late 1960s, starring in two big musical films. In \"Finian's Rainbow\" (1968), she starred opposite Fred Astaire and she was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for her performance. With her role, she again made history by becoming Astaire's final on-screen dance partner. The following year she was cast with Peter O'Toole in \"Goodbye, Mr. Chips\" (1969), a musical adaptation of the classic James Hilton novella", "id": "19868394" }, { "contents": "Sara Haden\n\n\n\". Haden later became a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract player in the late 1930s and had smallish roles in many of the studio's films, most notably in the Andy Hardy series starring Mickey Rooney, cast as the spinsterish Aunt Milly Forrest. Haden made her last film, \"Andy Hardy Comes Home\", in 1958, but was active on television until a 1965 guest spot on \"Dr. Kildare\". She was most notable for her stern, humorless characterisations such as a truant officer in Shirley Temple's \"", "id": "16961173" }, { "contents": "Rafaela Ottiano\n\n\n's last film was the musical comedy \"I Married an Angel\" (1942), starring Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. During her career in film, she appeared in approximately 45 motion pictures, opposite such actors as Barbara Stanwyck, Conrad Nagel, Peter Lorre, Zasu Pitts, and Katharine Hepburn. Ottiano lived in the Times Square area during the Prohibition Era and never married. She died in 1942, in the Boston home of her late parents, of intestinal cancer at the age of 54. She is buried at", "id": "9444719" }, { "contents": "Doris Davenport\n\n\nDoris Davenport, also known as Doris Jordan (January 1, 1917 – June 18, 1980) was an American film actress during the 1930s and early 1940s. Davenport was born in Moline, Illinois, but raised in Hollywood, California. She started auditioning for acting roles, and performed in her first film in 1934, titled \"Kid Millions\". From 1934 to 1939, she appeared in only five films, supporting herself by working in New York City as a fashion model between films. However, when she auditioned", "id": "2801211" }, { "contents": "Patricia Dane\n\n\nPatricia Dane (born Thelma Pearl Pippins, August 4, 1919 – June 5, 1995) was an American film actress of the 1940s. Dane was born Thelma Pearl Pippins in Blountstown, Florida and was also known as Thelma Byrnes after her stepfather. She began her career designing clothes for a New York City dress firm and was signed to an MGM contract in 1941. Dane's earliest appearances were two uncredited roles in \"Ziegfeld Girl\" and \"I'll Wait for You\" (both 1941). She played the", "id": "18013995" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\na young girl. Her new contract called for a starting salary of $75 a week and scales up to $1000 a week for the seventh year. In November 1935, Parker purchased a new home in Beverly Hills, California. The following year she joined the ballet school of Dave Gould at MGM, along with Maureen O'Sullivan. By the fall of 1936, Parker was studying singing. She played Marian Hardy in the extremely popular Andy Hardy film series in the late 1930s and early 1940s. She was in the original", "id": "18919251" }, { "contents": "Rooney Mara\n\n\nwas always afraid that I might fail.\" Her first and only role in high school was Juliet in \"Romeo and Juliet\", which she got after being signed up to audition by a friend. Mara acted in a few student films while at NYU, and then began her career in acting, first auditioning at the age of nineteen. Mara first appeared as an extra in films which starred her sister, including a bit-part in the 2005 direct-to-video horror film \"\". She found work", "id": "18311311" }, { "contents": "Georgiana Young\n\n\nBelzer and Gladys Royal. Along with her half-sisters, she was raised Roman Catholic. Young's acting career was short-lived, though she appeared in three films. Her debut role was as Berta Hubbard, sister of Mabel Gardiner Hubbard, in Irving Cummings's 1939 biographical film \"The Story of Alexander Graham Bell\", opposite her sisters Loretta (as Mabel), Sally, and Polly Ann. She would later have bit parts in two other films: \"No, No, Nanette\" (1940)", "id": "6269969" }, { "contents": "Glikeriya Bogdanova-Chesnokova\n\n\nmedals for her service. Following the war, in 1946, Bogdanova-Chesnokova returned to the Leningrad State Theatre of Musical Comedy. In 1947, she received the Stalin Prize. In the mid 1950s, Bogdanova-Chesnokova performed during three circus seasons with the clown, The act involved acrobatic actions. In 1955, Bogdanova-Chesnokova made her first significant film appearance. She played Maria Mikhailovna in the comedy film \"Tamer of Tigers\". Generally, Bogdanova-Chesnokova was a character actress taking supporting roles. However, in", "id": "5458931" }, { "contents": "Judi West\n\n\nJudi West (born December 15, 1942) is an American actress, best known for her supporting role opposite Jack Lemmon in the 1966 comedy film \"The Fortune Cookie. Judi West acted in a few films in the 1960s and also appeared in television in the 1960s through the early 1980s. Her notable film appearances include: She had earlier worked on the Broadway stage including \"A Family Affair\" (1962) and \"She Loves Me\" (1963-1964). Married from 1971 to 1989 to actor John Rubinstein", "id": "5957659" }, { "contents": "Judy Holliday\n\n\nJudy Holliday (born Judith Tuvim, June 21, 1921 – June 7, 1965) was an American actress, comedian, and singer. She began her career as part of a nightclub act before working in Broadway plays and musicals. Her success in the 1946 stage production of \"Born Yesterday\" as Billie Dawn led to her being cast in the 1950 film version for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. She appeared in several films", "id": "15453399" }, { "contents": "Elena Lucena\n\n\nMaría Elena Lucena Arcuri (25 September 1914 – 7 October 2015) was an Argentine film actress of the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema (1940–60). She began her career in radio in the 1930s and reached her greatest success with the role of \"Chimbela\", which was later depicted in film, theater and television. Her extensive film career includes approximately 50 films, including notable performances in \"Chimbela\" (1939) and \"Una noche cualquiera\" (1951). During the 1940s she participated in films with comedians", "id": "16119436" }, { "contents": "Florence Nash\n\n\nLynch in \"Within the Law\". She was a noted theater actor and comedian in vaudeville until the 1930s (appearing in sketches including \"In 1999\"), when she moved to Hollywood to try her luck with films. Her most notable role was as \"Nancy Blake\" in the 1939 MGM blockbuster \"The Women\". She also was the author of a book of verse, \"June Dusk\", published in 1918. After her retirement from acting in 1939, she spent the next decade living comfortably in", "id": "6401074" }, { "contents": "Doris Nolan\n\n\nher jitters, the show was a success and Nolan got positive reviews. When Nolan left the play, Woods sent her back to Hollywood, getting her a contract with Universal Pictures. She continued to move back and forth between movies and theater throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Her most prominent film appearance was in the 1938 version of \"Holiday\", where she played alongside Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Her subsequent film roles went downhill, but she reinvigorated her Broadway career with an 18-month stint in \"The Doughgirls\",", "id": "14779965" }, { "contents": "Marjorie Stapp\n\n\nMarjorie Stapp (September 17, 1921 – June 2, 2014), was an American actress who was mainly in low-budget pictures. Stapp began her film career when she signed a contract with the film studio 20th Century-Fox in the 1940s. Her first screen appearance was in \"The Kid from Brooklyn\", a 1946 film starring Danny Kaye. This was followed by another minor appearance in \"Linda, Be Good\" (1947). Eventually, she landed a leading role in the Western movie \"The", "id": "3140505" }, { "contents": "Roshini (actress)\n\n\nRoshini is an Indian film actress who has worked in the Telugu and Tamil film industries. She is the younger sister actress Jyothika and half sister to Nagma. After getting a recommendation by her sister Nagma, Roshini made her acting debut in Selva's comedy film \"Sishya\", where she played the lead role alongside Karthik. She subsequently starred in \"Master\" (1997), opposite Chiranjeevi. Roshini was keen to accept performance-orientated roles and turned down several offers in late 1997 to be a part of films in", "id": "12724581" }, { "contents": "Lola Albright\n\n\nmotion picture debut with a small singing role in the 1947 musical comedy \"The Unfinished Dance\" and then appeared the following year in two Judy Garland movies: \"The Pirate\" and \"Easter Parade\". She first gained studio and public notice in the 1949 film noir production \"Champion\" with her portrayal of the wife of a manipulative boxing manager; she falls for a prizefighter played by Kirk Douglas. For the next several years, she appeared in secondary roles in over 20 films, including several B westerns. Among", "id": "18089616" }, { "contents": "Marika Rökk\n\n\nthe 1930s and 1940s. She had the technical skill and glamour to carry off the formulaic plots and dialogue and provide German audiences with a home grown star to rival the popular American actresses. \"Der Bettelstudent\" and \"Gasparone\", followed by \"Hello Janine!\" in 1939, all starred her together with Johannes Heesters and established them as the \"dream couple\" of the musical comedy genre. In her appearances she cultivated her \"magyar\" accent conveying a notion of \"paprika\" exoticism. Her films, which", "id": "9061566" }, { "contents": "Fay Wray\n\n\nShe continued to star in various films, including \"The Richest Girl in the World\", a second film with Joel McCrea, but by the early 1940s, her appearances became less frequent. She retired from acting in 1942 after her second marriage but due to financial exigencies soon resumed her acting career, and over the next three decades, Wray appeared in several films and also frequently on television. Wray was cast in the 1953-54 ABC situation comedy \"The Pride of the Family\" as Catherine Morrison. Paul Hartman", "id": "10781506" }, { "contents": "Margaret O'Brien\n\n\n(1944), opposite Judy Garland. As Tootie Smith, the feisty but fragile little sister of Judy Garland, she was a bright point in a very good film, especially in her musical numbers with Garland and during a Halloween sequence in which she confronts a grouchy neighbor. For her performance, she was awarded a special juvenile Oscar in 1944. Margaret and June Allyson were known as \"The Town Criers\" of MGM. \"We were always in competition: I wanted to cry better than June, and June wanted", "id": "7504217" }, { "contents": "Ann Sothern\n\n\nSothern appeared in two musical films in 1948, \"April Showers\" opposite Jack Carson and \"Words and Music\" starring an all-star cast of MGM actors, singers and dancers. In 1949, she appeared in the Academy Award-winning film \"A Letter to Three Wives\" for 20th Century Fox. Sothern received excellent reviews for her performance but the acclaim failed to stimulate her career, which had begun to wane in the late 1940s. In 1949, Sothern contracted hepatitis which she would battle for the next three", "id": "2026182" }, { "contents": "Jane Isbell\n\n\nWar soldier who once saved the life of Andrew Jackson. Clark Isbell's father was also a cousin of Alabama Governor William J. Samford. The Isbells moved to Los Angeles when Jane was an infant. The elder of two sisters, she began modeling and appearing as an extra in films when only four years old. In 1932, she made her first Mickey McGuire comedy starring Mickey Rooney and would eventually make five films in the Mickey McGuire series, similar to the Our Gang films. She grew up with child stars for playmates", "id": "12640286" }, { "contents": "Shirley Palmer (actress)\n\n\n1930 she appeared with Dorothy Sebastian and Neil Hamilton in \"Ladies Must Play\", her only film of that year. In 1932 she appeared in \"This Sporting Age\", and in 1933 she starred in probably her most recognizable role, starring opposite John Wayne in \"Somewhere in Sonora\". It would be her last credited role. She had two uncredited roles following that film, one the same year and the other in 1934, after which her career ended. She married once, to writer John Collier, and", "id": "3797930" }, { "contents": "Betty Grable\n\n\n(1930), starring Eddie Cantor. Although she received no on-screen credit for her performance, she led the film's opening musical number, entitled \"Cowboys\". In 1932, she signed a contract with RKO Radio Pictures, and she was assigned to a succession of acting, singing, and dancing classes at the studio's drama school. Her first film for the studio, \"Probation\" (1932), provided the 14-year-old Grable with her first credited screen role. Over the next few years", "id": "17559458" }, { "contents": "Erika Jayne\n\n\n, and pink.\" Soon after she gave birth to a son, Thomas Zizzo, Jr. After the couple divorced a few years later, she relocated to Los Angeles to pursue her dream of becoming a singer and performer. Early in her career, Girardi worked as a waitress to support herself between acting jobs. Girardi began her acting career in the early 1990s by appearing in small roles in several American television series and films. Her first on-screen appearance was a role as Suzanne Morton in the episode \"Prescription for", "id": "22006264" }, { "contents": "Thelma Scott\n\n\nThelma Scott (17 June 1913 – 23 November 2006) was an Australian character actress and television director whose 70-year career in theatre, radio, film and Australian television made her one of her country's most recognizable and beloved personalities. Having started her career in the early 1930s in theatre and film productions, she became one of the nation's biggest radio performers, during the 1940s featuring in productions such as \"Big Sister\" and \"Blue Hills\". She returned to made for TV films in the early late 1950s and", "id": "7852633" } ]
June Preisser ( June 26 , 1920 -- September 19 , 1984 ) was an American actress , briefly popular in musical films during the late 1930s and early 1940s , many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat . Born in New Orleans , Louisiana , Preisser was one of six children , and was an underweight baby . Her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age , in an attempt to build her strength . There she , and her sister Cherry , learnt acrobatics . Their mother was keen to have them follow a career in showbusiness , especially when their father died suddenly , leaving the family with few options to make a living . When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home , and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville , and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936 . The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States , and also performed in Europe , most notably for . Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage , and June was signed to a film contract by . Her first film Dancing Co-Ed ( 1939 ) provided only a small part , but her next film , Babes in Arms ( 1939 ) , gave her a significant role opposite [START_ENT] Mickey Rooney [END_ENT] and Judy Garland . She performed with Rooney and Garland again in Strike Up the Band ( 1940 ) , and with Rooney in two " Andy Hardy " films , Judge Hardy and Son ( 1939 ) and Andy Hardy 's Private Secretary ( 1941 ) . Gallant Sons ( 1940 ) placed her in a comedic murder mystery , and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in ( 1941 ) , and followed this with Sweater Girl ( 1942 ) , opposite Eddie Bracken . She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry , and the birth of a son , Ricky . By this time , MGM had little interest in promoting her , and she left to work for Monogram Pictures . She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years , and played the character " Dodie Rogers " in seven " high school " comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948 . Her final film was ( 1948 ) , and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of Annie Get Your Gun
336478a2-375c-4449-b267-60a45dbb375e_June_Preisse:5
[{"answer": "Mickey Rooney", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "87624", "title": "Mickey Rooney"}]}]
[ { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n, and June was signed to a film contract by MGM. Her first film, \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), provided only a small part, but her next film, \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. She performed with Rooney and Garland again in \"Strike Up the Band\" (1940), and with Rooney in two \"Andy Hardy\" films, \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939) and \"Andy Hardy", "id": "17067760" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nJune Preisser (June 26, 1920 – September 19, 1984) was an American actress, popular in musical films during the late 1930s and through the 1940s, many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat. Born in New Orleans, Preisser was one of six children. An underweight child, her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age, in an attempt to build her strength. There she, and her sister Cherry, learned acrobatics. Their mother was keen to have them follow a career", "id": "17067758" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n's Private Secretary\" (1941). \"Gallant Sons\" (1940) placed her in a comedic murder mystery, and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in \"Henry Aldrich for President\" (1941), and followed this with \"Sweater Girl\" (1942), opposite Eddie Bracken. She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry, and the birth of a son, Ricky. By this time, MGM had little interest in promoting her, and she left to work", "id": "17067761" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nfor Monogram Pictures. She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years, and played the character \"Dodie Rogers\" in seven \"high school\" comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948. Her final film was Music Man (1948), and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of \"Annie Get Your Gun\", she retired from acting. She divorced not long after, and taught dancing and acrobatics in Los Angeles, before moving with her son to Florida. They", "id": "17067762" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nin show business, especially when their father died suddenly, leaving the family with few options to make a living. When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home, and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville, and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936. The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States, and also performed in Europe, most notably for George VI of the United Kingdom. Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage", "id": "17067759" }, { "contents": "Melody Trail\n\n\nand Prejudice\" (1940). In 1939, she played the role of Carreen O'Hara, the sister of Scarlet O'Hara, in the film \"Gone with the Wind\". From 1937 to 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. She retired from films in 1950. Rutherford died on June 11, 2012 at her home in Beverly Hills, California. \"Melody Trail\" was filmed August 21–27, 1935. The film had an operating budget of $15,075", "id": "2111015" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nHardy Family movies as a literal girl-next-door to Rooney's character Andy Hardy, in \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938), although Hardy's love interest was played by Lana Turner. They teamed as lead characters for the first time in \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), ultimately appearing in five additional films, including Hardy films \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\" (1940) and \"Life Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland stated that she, Rooney, and other young", "id": "13593082" }, { "contents": "Annie Get Your Gun (film)\n\n\n, MGM's biggest musical comedy star, was originally cast as Annie Oakley. She recorded all her songs for the soundtrack and worked for two months under the direction of Busby Berkeley and dance director Robert Alton. Berkeley and Garland had worked together previously in the late 1930s and early 1940s in a successful series of backstage musicals teaming her with fellow juvenile star Mickey Rooney. Berkeley had been fired from the Garland/Rooney musical \"Girl Crazy\" in 1943 due to personality clashes with musical director Roger Edens and for driving Garland very", "id": "13779025" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nYear for her live recording \"Judy at Carnegie Hall\" (1961). Garland began performing in vaudeville as a child with her two older sisters, and was later signed to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a teenager. Although she appeared in more than two dozen films with MGM and received acclaim for many different roles, she is often best remembered for her portrayal of Dorothy Gale in \"The Wizard of Oz\" (1939). Garland was a frequent on-screen partner of both Mickey Rooney and Gene Kelly,", "id": "13593062" }, { "contents": "Louise LaPlanche\n\n\n, portraying a gypsy girl in \"The Hunchback of Notre Dame\" in 1923. Both LaPlanche began competing in California beauty pageants. In 1939, Louise LaPlanche was crowned Miss Catalina. Her Miss Catalina win led to a film contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). She appeared in the 1940 MGM musical film, \"Strike Up the Band\", which starred Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. LaPlanche later left MGM and signed on to Paramount Studios. She was cast in several Paramount films, including 1942's", "id": "3022959" }, { "contents": "Bonita Granville\n\n\nfilm success led to Granville reprising the role in three sequels from 1938 to 1939, including \"Nancy Drew... Reporter\" (1939). As a young adult, she was once again cast in supporting roles, often in prestigious films such as \"Now, Voyager\" (1942), as well as two Andy Hardy films with Mickey Rooney, \"Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble\" (1944) and \"Love Laughs at Andy Hardy\" (1946). She is also remembered for her starring role in the World", "id": "12873960" }, { "contents": "Eve Arden\n\n\nThis was followed by roles in the crime film \"The Forgotten Woman\" (1939), and the comedy \"At the Circus\" (1939), opposite Groucho Marx, a role that would require her to perform acrobatics. In 1940, she appeared opposite Clark Gable in \"Comrade X\", followed by the drama \"Manpower\" (1941), opposite Marlene Dietrich. She also appeared in a supporting part in the Red Skelton comedy \"Whistling in the Dark\" (1941), and the romantic comedy \"", "id": "10321268" }, { "contents": "Shirley Temple\n\n\nher departure from Twentieth Century-Fox, Shirley was signed by MGM for her comeback; the studio made plans to team her with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney for the Andy Hardy series. The idea was quickly abandoned. The next idea was teaming her with Garland and Rooney for the musical \"Babes on Broadway\". Fearing that either of the latter two could easily upstage Temple, MGM replaced her with Virginia Weidler. As a result, her only film for Metro was \"Kathleen\" in 1941, a story about an", "id": "7504264" }, { "contents": "Barbara Read\n\n\ncompany. When she failed to receive any roles because of her lack of experience, she joined the Laguna Beach Players theater, where she acted in a new play each month for two years. Her first film appearance was one of the three principal girls in the 1936 comedy film \"Three Smart Girls\", which also starred Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. From 1937 through 1939, Read appeared in nine films, most notably starring in \"The Spellbinder\", opposite Lee Tracy. From 1940 through 1948, she appeared in", "id": "5406875" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy\n\n\nLife Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland's character, Betsy Booth, is an aspiring singer and she sings in the first two of these films. However, although Garland songs were planned for the final film, they were eventually dropped. Unlike Garland-Rooney films outside of the \"Andy Hardy\" series, Rooney's Hardy character is not a musician, so Garland and Rooney do not perform together in the Hardy films. Rooney played the character continuously from age 16 to 25, when he appeared in", "id": "7714497" }, { "contents": "Fay Holden\n\n\nthe depression era. Eventually they left Vancouver and moved to Hollywood. Holden appeared in 46 motion pictures between 1935 and 1958, but is best known for her recurring role as Emily Hardy, mother of Mickey Rooney's character in the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" film series. The series was enormously popular in the late 1930s and early '40s, and Holden was in 15 of the 16 Hardy movies, surpassed only by Rooney, who was in all 16. Holden is also remembered for her performance as Hazel, the mother", "id": "15552902" }, { "contents": "Margaret Early\n\n\nBrent, Bette Davis, and Fay Bainter. She later became a freelance actress and found herself working in various roles at such studios as RKO, Warner Bros., and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her other screen roles include parts in \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939), \"Strike Up The Band\" (1940), \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" (1941), and \"Stage Door Canteen\" (1943). She made her last screen appearance in \"Cinderella Jones\" (1946)", "id": "11267109" }, { "contents": "Sheila Darcy\n\n\n1935 her career had taken off, and from then until 1941 she had roles in 41 films. In most of her early films, she played the heroine in B-movies, often Westerns. Darcy's best known roles were as the female lead in cliffhangers, such as the 1939 film \"Zorro's Fighting Legion\", in which she performed opposite Reed Hadley. She also played the Dragon Lady in the serial \"Terry and the Pirates\", released in 1940. In Westerns, she often played opposite popular cowboy", "id": "21067295" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nIn 1937, Rooney made his first film alongside Judy Garland with \"Thoroughbreds Don't Cry\". Garland and Rooney became close friends as they co-starred in future films and became a successful song-and-dance team. Audiences delighted in seeing the \"playful interactions between the two stars showcase a wonderful chemistry\". Along with three of the \"Andy Hardy\" films, where she portrayed a girl attracted to Andy, they appeared together in a string of successful musicals, including \"Babes in Arms\" (1939", "id": "5690267" }, { "contents": "Brenda Marshall\n\n\nArdis Ankerson (September 29, 1915 – July 30, 1992), known as Brenda Marshall, was a Filipino-born, American film actress. Marshall made her first film appearance in the 1939 \"Espionage Agent\". The following year, she played the leading lady to Errol Flynn in \"The Sea Hawk\". After divorcing actor Richard Gaines in 1940, she married William Holden in 1941, and her own career soon slowed. She starred opposite James Cagney in \"Captains of the Clouds\" (1942).", "id": "14392731" }, { "contents": "Julie Haydon\n\n\nmade by MGM. In 1932, she signed with RKO, and her first major role came that year in \"The Conquerors\", directed by William Wellman Her most notable performance came in 1935's \"The Scoundrel\" playing opposite Noël Coward, but, despite a new contract with MGM, only a few more films were to come in her short career, including \"A Family Affair\" (1937), the initial movie in the Andy Hardy series. Some have held that it was Haydon and not Fay Wray who", "id": "19690260" }, { "contents": "Jean Darling\n\n\nAssociation. She turned down an offer to appear alongside Mickey Rooney in one of the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" movies, and went on Broadway, making her debut in the musical \"Count Me In\" in 1942. Darling's stage career hit a real high when she landed the role of Carrie Pipperidge in the original Broadway production of \"Carousel\" in 1945. She appeared in 850 consecutive performances. Her role as Carrie Pipperidge helped her with parts for radio and TV in the 1950s. She hosted her own television show", "id": "1616169" }, { "contents": "List of Lana Turner performances\n\n\nLana Turner was an American actress who appeared in over fifty films during her career, which spanned four decades. Discovered in 1937 at age 16, she signed a contract with Warner Bros. and appeared in several films for the studio before signing a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The studio's co-founder, Louis B. Mayer, helped further her career by casting her in several youth-oriented comedies and musicals, including \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941),", "id": "7891475" }, { "contents": "Marguerite Chapman\n\n\ncontract to Warner Brothers in 1941, and then with Columbia from 1942 to 1948. She made her film debut in 1940, working for the next two years in small roles. In 1942, her big break came with Republic Pictures when she was cast in the leading female role in the twelve-part adventure film serial \"Spy Smasher\", a production that has been ranked among the best serials ever made. Chapman soon began receiving more leading roles and appeared opposite important stars such as Edward G. Robinson and George Sanders.", "id": "2722471" }, { "contents": "Jeanne Cagney\n\n\nRKO Pictures. However, she signed a long-term contract with Paramount Pictures. She appeared in 19 films between 1939 and 1965, including four films with her brother James: \"Yankee Doodle Dandy\" (1942), \"The Time of Your Life\" (1948), \"A Lion Is in the Streets\" (1953), and \"Man of a Thousand Faces\" (1957). Cagney gave a noted performance opposite Mickey Rooney in the film noir crime film \"Quicksand\" (1950). Cagney", "id": "6954933" }, { "contents": "Little Annie Rooney (1925 film)\n\n\nLittle Annie Rooney is a 1925 American silent comedy-drama film starring Mary Pickford and directed by William Beaudine. Pickford, one of the most successful actresses of the silent era, was best known throughout her career for her iconic portrayals of penniless young girls. After generating only modest box office revenue playing adults in her previous two films, Pickford wrote and produced \"Little Annie Rooney\" to cater to silent film audiences. Though she was 33 years old, Pickford played the title role, an Irish girl living in the slums", "id": "236551" }, { "contents": "Edith Barrett\n\n\n, she married leading man Vincent Price in 1938. The marriage ended in 1948. She and Price had one son, author/poet and environmental activist Vincent Barrett Price (born 1940). Her biggest Broadway success was as star of the now-obscure production \"Mrs. Moonlight\". In her first film, \"Ladies in Retirement\" (1941), she played one of the two half-witted half-sisters of Ida Lupino's homicidal character. Her best remembered movie role is possibly Mrs. Holland's mother-", "id": "18853813" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\nHardy film, \"A Family Affair\", in 1937. Mickey Rooney played Andy Hardy in the series, supported by Lewis Stone, Ann Rutherford, and Fay Holden. The movies were directed by George B. Seitz. Parker's character, Marion, appeared in most of the films, and her romances were a recurring feature of the series. Though she and the character she played were absent from the last two Andy Hardy films of the 1940s, Parker came out of retirement to play Marian Hardy in one more movie,", "id": "18919252" }, { "contents": "Nancy Walker\n\n\nrole provided Walker with her film debut when she signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to make a movie version, starring Lucille Ball (filmed in 1943). In 1943, she also appeared with Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in the second film version of \"Girl Crazy\". Her next film, \"Broadway Rhythm\", in which she had a featured musical number backed by Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra, \"Milkman, Keep Those Bottles Quiet\", ended Walker's contract with Metro. Her dry comic", "id": "9657966" }, { "contents": "List of Gloria Stuart performances\n\n\nstarred in two films opposite Shirley Temple: \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936), and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938), both for 20th Century Fox. She subsequently co-starred in \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939) opposite Don Ameche. Dissatisfied with her career in film, Stuart shifted her focus to stage acting. Between 1940 and 1942, Stuart appeared in numerous summer stock plays in New England, including a 1940 production of \"Our Town\" in which she starred alongside its playwright", "id": "19503931" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nBabes in Arms is the 1939 American film version of the 1937 Broadway musical of the same name. The film version stars Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland, and features Charles Winninger, Guy Kibbee, June Preisser, Grace Hayes, and Betty Jaynes. The film concerns a group of youngsters trying to put on a show to prove their vaudevillian parents wrong and make it to Broadway. The original Broadway script was significantly revamped, restructured, and rewritten to accommodate Hollywood's needs. In 1921, vaudeville performer Joe Moran (Winninger)", "id": "9219782" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nhim when he transferred to MGM in 1938. Turner attracted attention by playing the role of a murder victim in her first film, LeRoy's \"They Won't Forget\" (1937), and she later transitioned into featured roles, often appearing as an ingénue. During the early 1940s, Turner established herself as a leading actress and one of MGM's top performers, appearing in such films as the film noir \"Johnny Eager\" (1941); the musical \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941); the horror film", "id": "11929991" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nthe stature of most leading men. He appeared in a number of films, including \"Words and Music\" in 1948, which paired him for the last time with Garland on film (he appeared with her on one episode as a guest on \"The Judy Garland Show\"). He briefly starred in a CBS radio series, \"Shorty Bell\", in the summer of 1948, and reprised his role as \"Andy Hardy\", with most of the original cast, in a syndicated radio version of \"The", "id": "5690276" }, { "contents": "Donna Reed\n\n\nmany starlets at MGM, she played Mickey Rooney's love interest in an Andy Hardy film, in her case the hugely popular \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942). She was second billed in a children's film, \"Mokey\" (1942). Reed played a love interest in \"Calling Dr. Gillespie\" (1942) and \"Apache Trail\" (1942), then did a thriller with Edward Arnold, \"Eyes in the Night\" (1942), directed by Fred Zinnemann. Reed had", "id": "13840841" }, { "contents": "Evalyn Knapp\n\n\nHis Private Secretary\", a light comedy in which Wayne portrays a suit-and-tie wearing playboy determined to win her over. She also appeared in \"Corruption\" that year opposite Preston Foster. One of her better known film roles was opposite Ken Maynard in the 1934 film \"In Old Santa Fe\" featuring Gene Autry in his first screen appearance, in which he sang with a bluegrass band. She worked through 1941, but her career slowed afterward. In 1943, she played her last role, uncredited,", "id": "560741" }, { "contents": "Kathryn Grayson\n\n\nexercise. Within a year, Grayson had her first screen test. However, the studio executives were not satisfied, and she went through a further six months of lessons until she made her first film appearance in 1941's \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" as the character's secretary Kathryn Land. In the film, she takes part in three musical numbers. Two further films were planned for Grayson in 1941; \"White House Girl\", which was later made in 1948 with Durbin, and \"Very Warm for May", "id": "20045432" }, { "contents": "Susi Nicoletti\n\n\nSusi Nicoletti (3 September 1918 – 5 June 2005) was a Bavarian-born actress best remembered today for over 100 supporting roles mostly in comedy films. She was born as Susanne Emilie Luise Adele Habersack in Munich, but spent most of her childhood with her parents in Amsterdam. Back in Munich, she made her stage debut at age 13. Two years later she became a ballerina. In the early 1930s she turned to cabaret. In 1939, she was offered her first film role. In 1940 she moved to", "id": "6091110" }, { "contents": "Dorothy Morris\n\n\nShe did a screen test for the female lead in \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942), but lost to Donna Reed. Appearing in bit parts in several of the studio's more successful films, Morris was signed to a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract in 1941. For one of her early film roles, \"Cry 'Havoc'\" (1943), she affected a British accent. Her next picture was the well-received drama \"The Human Comedy\", which featured a star cast,", "id": "323808" }, { "contents": "The Courtship of Andy Hardy\n\n\nThe Courtship of Andy Hardy is a 1942 film, part of the Andy Hardy series. It gave an early role to Donna Reed although Mickey Rooney had lobbied for his then-wife Ava Gardner to have her part. Within a few months of the film's release, she filed for divorce. This was the 12th entry in the long-running \"Andy Hardy\" series of sixteen. When Carvel teenager and new tow truck-owner Andy Hardy is stopped by a policeman for driving without a license plate, a radio", "id": "20736523" }, { "contents": "Mae Busch\n\n\nMae Busch (18 June 1891 – 20 April 1946) was an Australian-born actress who worked in both silent and sound films in early Hollywood. In the latter part of her career she appeared in many Laurel and Hardy comedies, where she frequently played Hardy's shrewish wife. Mae Busch was born Annie May Busch in Melbourne, Victoria to popular Australian vaudeville performers Elizabeth Maria Lay and Frederick William Busch. Her mother had been active since 1883 under the stage names \"Dora Devere\" and then \"Dora Busch\";", "id": "10830566" }, { "contents": "Hannelore Schroth\n\n\ndebut at the age of nine in 1931's Max Ophüls' comedy \"Dann schon lieber Lebertran\" opposite her mother. Until age sixteen she attended drama school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Her early film successes include \"Spiel im Sommerwind\" (1938), \"Weisser Flieder\" (1939) and \"Kitty und die Weltkonferenz\" (1939) - the latter of which was her first leading role. During World War II, Hannelore Schroth continued performing in films. Unlike her father, Heinrich Schroth, who was by", "id": "16153872" }, { "contents": "Lupe Vélez\n\n\npopular actress, RKO Pictures did not renew her contract in 1934. Over the next few years, Vélez worked for various studio as a freelance actress; she also spent two years in England where she filmed \"The Morals of Marcus\" and \"Gypsy Melody\" (both 1936). She returned to Los Angeles the following year where she appeared in the final part of the Wheeler & Woolsey comedy \"High Flyers\" (1937). Vélez made her final appearance on Broadway in the 1938 musical \"You Never Know\"", "id": "20716058" }, { "contents": "Katharine Kavanaugh\n\n\nher biggest claims to fame was helping to create the Jones Family characters, who would appear in 17 low-budget films between 1936 and 1940. The first film in the series, \"Every Saturday Night\", was released in 1936, and Kavanaugh would also co-write \"Educating Father\", released later that same year. While her screenwriting career cooled in the late 1930s, she continued writing plays that were produced in the Los Angeles area until her death in 1942. She and her husband, Oliver Ziegfeld (", "id": "21036559" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\n, including \"The Wizard of Oz\" and \"Babes in Arms\". She was the fourth person to receive the award as well as only one of twelve in history to ever be presented with one. Garland starred in three films released in 1940: \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\", \"Strike Up the Band\", and \"Little Nellie Kelly\". In the last, she played her first adult role, a dual role of both mother and daughter. \"Little Nellie Kelly\" was purchased from George M.", "id": "13593089" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nliving on her own. In late 1949 Hardi and her husband moved to Jakarta. Two years later she made her feature film debut in a bit role in the Produksi Film Negara (PFN; State Film Corporation)'s \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". The following year she took a starring role in another PFN film, \"Si Pintjang\", portraying an old woman; as she was only twenty-four, she was artificially aged with make-up. That same year she appeared as the lead love interest in", "id": "15623084" }, { "contents": "Jane Frazee\n\n\nB film \"Melody and Moonlight\" (1940) for Republic Pictures. Shortly after the film's release she was signed by Universal Pictures and was featured in \"Buck Privates\", the high-grossing 1941 comedy/World War II film starring Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The strong impression she made in that film elevated her to leading-lady roles in Universal's popular \"B\" musicals, usually appearing opposite Robert Paige. She left Universal in late 1942, when she married actor-director Glenn Tryon, who", "id": "11708629" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\n\n\nAndy Hardy Meets Debutante is a 1940 American romantic comedy film directed by George B. Seitz. The film stars Lewis Stone, Mickey Rooney, Cecilia Parker, Fay Holden and Judy Garland. It is the ninth of the \"Andy Hardy\" full-length film series. Andy Hardy (Mickey Rooney) from Carvel becomes infatuated with a well-known young socialite, Daphne Fowler (Diana Lewis), from New York City. Even though he hasn’t met the woman in person, he drops her name to his friends and", "id": "11382757" }, { "contents": "Martha Vickers\n\n\nplayed minor roles in several films during the early 1940s, working first at Universal Studios and then at RKO Pictures. She next went to Warner Bros., where \"they gave her the star push, rearranging her surname to 'Vickers.'\" Her work there included the role of Carmen Sternwood, the promiscuous, drug-addicted younger sister of Lauren Bacall's character in \"The Big Sleep\" (1946). She also starred in a musical, \"The Time, the Place and the Girl\", followed by", "id": "721594" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nwas over, she was summoned back to work and ultimately performed two songs as a guest in the Rodgers and Hart biopic \"Words and Music\" (1948), which was her last appearance with Mickey Rooney. Despite the all-star cast, \"Words and Music\" barely broke even at the box office. Having regained her strength, as well as some needed weight during her suspension, Garland felt much better and in the fall of 1948, she returned to MGM to replace a pregnant June Allyson for the musical", "id": "13593101" }, { "contents": "Martha O'Driscoll\n\n\n's Dangerous\" (1937), she was not credited by name. In the Deanna Durbin vehicle \"Mad About Music\" (1937), she was billed as \"pretty girl.\" Her face appeared on such advertisements as Charm-Kurl Supreme Cold Wave and Max Factor Hollywood Face Powder. Universal lent O'Driscoll to MGM for parts in \"The Secret of Dr Kildare\" (1939) and \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1940), starring Mickey Rooney. RKO, however, gave O'Driscoll her first two starring", "id": "20196774" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nMarlia Hardi (also Marlia Hardy; 10 March 192718 June 1984) was an Indonesian film actress active from 1951 to 1983. Born in the Central Javan city of Magelang, she took to the stage in the 1940s before moving to Jakarta in 1949. Two years later she made her feature film debut in \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". Over the next two decades she appeared in over seventy films, became recognized for her depictions of mothers, and received the Citra Award for Best Supporting Actress. Despite her productiveness, however", "id": "15623082" }, { "contents": "Susan Peters\n\n\nLos Angeles. After completing filming of the comedy \"Andy Hardy's Double Life\" (1942) in which she had a lead role, Mervyn LeRoy cast Peters in the drama \"Random Harvest\", in which she portrayed a young woman who falls in love with her step-uncle. The film was one of the top 25 highest-earning films of the year, and Peters's performance garnered her critical acclaim, earning her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. The success of \"Random Harvest\" led", "id": "17519590" }, { "contents": "Paulette Goddard\n\n\nshe appeared as an uncredited extra in two films, the Laurel and Hardy short film \"Berth Marks\" (1929), and George Fitzmaurice's drama \"The Locked Door\" (1929). Following her divorce, she briefly visited Europe before returning to Hollywood in late 1930 with her mother. Her second attempt at acting was no more successful than the first, as she landed work only as an extra. In 1930, she signed her first film contract with producer Samuel Goldwyn to appear as a Goldwyn Girl in \"", "id": "3980436" }, { "contents": "Trixie Friganza\n\n\nTrixie Friganza (born Delia O'Callaghan; November 29, 1870 – February 27, 1955) began her career as an operetta soubrette, working her way from the chorus to starring in musical comedies to having her own feature act on the vaudeville circuit. She transitioned to film in the early 1920s mostly playing small characters that were quirky and comedic and retired from the stage in 1940 due to health concerns. She spent her last years teaching drama to young women in a convent school and when she died she left everything to the convent", "id": "13928014" }, { "contents": "Susan Hayward\n\n\nSusan Hayward (born Edythe Marrenner; June 30, 1917 – March 14, 1975) was an American actress and model. After working as a fashion model, Hayward traveled to Hollywood in 1937. She secured a film contract and played several small supporting roles over the next few years. By the late 1940s, the quality of her film roles had improved, and she achieved recognition for her dramatic abilities with the first of five Academy Award nominations for Best Actress for her performance as an alcoholic in \"Smash-Up,", "id": "14143916" }, { "contents": "Nella Walker\n\n\nyear to 1938, she had 23 film appearances. Her biggest film appearance during this period was in \"Young Dr. Kildare\" with Lionel Barrymore and Lew Ayres. Throughout the 1930s, her career was strong, and despite never being a premier star, she repeatedly had solid acting roles. She finished the decade strongly in 1939 with nine film roles, only three of which were uncredited. The 1940s mirrored her success of the previous decade in many ways, with appearances in 37 films from 1940 to 1947. Later in her", "id": "4686869" }, { "contents": "May Wallace\n\n\nMay Wallace (August 23, 1877 – December 11, 1938) was an American film actress. She appeared in 63 films between 1914 and 1939. Wallace was born in Russiaville, Indiana and died in Los Angeles, California, where she worked in Hollywood as a film actress. She often played supporting roles for producer Hal Roach in his Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang comedies, mostly in maternal roles. Wallace was married to Thomas W. Maddox until her death, they had one daughter and one son. She died of", "id": "9169980" }, { "contents": "Ora Carew\n\n\na film editor. Ora's birth year has been listed as 1893, on her death certificate and is also what her grave says, but Utah birth index and the 1900 census indicate 1891. She was educated by private tutors and at Roland Hall Seminary. After her father died on June 19, 1896, her mother moved with her three children to California. Her screen career began with MGM, following numerous engagements in vaudeville, musical comedy and stock. Some of her most notable films with MGM were \"Go West,", "id": "19207733" }, { "contents": "Eilene Janssen\n\n\nMary Eilene Janssen (born May 25, 1938), is a retired American film and television actress. Eilene Janssen was born in Los Angeles, California on May 25, 1938, to parents Henry Janssen and Mary Ellen Thompson. She began her film career as a child actress in the early 1940s. With her father being a longtime worker for Universal Studios, Eilene Janssen made her first screen appearance in the 1940 film \"Sandy Gets Her Man\". She continued to have bit parts in several movies such as \"Two", "id": "12362318" }, { "contents": "Ann Rutherford\n\n\nLouis Mayer originally refused the loan because he considered the role too minor, but Rutherford passionately appealed to him to change his mind. In December 1939, while promoting the new movie, Rutherford visited six Confederate Army veterans at the Confederate Soldiers Home near Atlanta. One of the veterans gave Rutherford a rose corsage tied with Confederate colors. From 1937 until 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. Her first film in this series was \"You're Only Young Once\"", "id": "6472820" }, { "contents": "Gloria Stuart\n\n\nMan\" (1933), followed by roles in the Shirley Temple musicals \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936) and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938). She also starred as Queen Anne in the musical comedy \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939). Beginning in 1940, Stuart slowed her film career, instead performing in regional theater in New England. In 1945, following a tenure as a contract player for Twentieth Century Fox, Stuart abandoned her acting career and shifted to a career as an artist", "id": "3454792" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nand Judy Garland in the Andy Hardy film \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938). During the shoot, Turner completed her studies with an educational social worker, allowing her to graduate high school that year. The film was a box-office success, and her appearance in it as a flirtatious high school student convinced studio head Louis B. Mayer that Turner could be the next Jean Harlow, a sex symbol who had died six months before Turner's arrival at MGM. Mayer helped further Turner's career by giving her", "id": "11930007" }, { "contents": "Linda Darnell\n\n\nLinda Darnell (born Monetta Eloyse Darnell, October 16, 1923April 10, 1965) was an American film actress. Darnell progressed from modeling as a child to acting in theater and film. At the encouragement of her mother, she made her first film in 1939, and appeared in supporting roles in big-budget films for 20th Century Fox throughout the 1940s. She rose to fame with co-starring roles opposite Tyrone Power in adventure films, and established a main character career after her role in \"Forever Amber\" (", "id": "9752181" }, { "contents": "Marcia Mae Jones\n\n\nsigned her to co-star with Jackie Moran in a few rustic romances; when this series lapsed, both Jones and Moran joined Monogram's popular action-comedy series starring Frankie Darro. As a young adult, she continued to work in motion pictures, notably in \"Nine Girls\" (1944) and \"Arson, Inc.\" (1948). Like many familiar faces of the 1940s, she appeared on numerous television programs. In 1951 she appeared as comic foil to Buster Keaton in Keaton's filmed TV series.", "id": "5963847" }, { "contents": "Peggy Drake\n\n\nPeggy Drake (6 October 1922 – 19 September 2014), was an Austrian film and television actress. She primarily appeared in B-movies of the 1940s. Born Lieselotte Mayer in Vienna, Austria, she moved to the United States with her family at the age of three. Her acting career started with an uncredited role in the film \"Too Many Girls\" (1940). Her career was short-lived, appearing in five films between 1940 and 1942, most notably in the serial film \"King of the", "id": "8901594" }, { "contents": "Signe Hasso\n\n\nfilm in Sweden. In 1933, she made her first film, \"Tystnadens hus\", with German film director/cameraman Harry Hasso, whom she married the same year. They had a son by the time she was 19. They divorced in 1941. In 1940, she moved to the United States, where she signed a contract with RKO Pictures, who promoted her as \"the next Garbo\". With few RKO roles forthcoming, she turned to the stage to make a living. According to the Internet Broadway", "id": "19347089" }, { "contents": "Rita La Roy\n\n\nand the \"cobra dance\" in which her feet and legs were tied together under a stylized snakeskin so that she danced by undulating her torso.\" In 1929, she made her film debut in \"The Delightful Rogue\", starring opposite matinee idol Rod La Rocque. Over the next several years, working as part of the RKO Radio Pictures stable, she appeared in both starring and supporting roles. While her final significant role was in the 1940 comedy-mystery \"Hold That Woman!\", she had several small", "id": "13534727" }, { "contents": "Elizabeth Taylor\n\n\nto socially prominent American parents, Taylor moved with her family to Los Angeles in 1939. She made her acting debut in a minor role in the Universal Pictures film \"There's One Born Every Minute\" (1942) but the studio ended her contract after a year. She was then signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and became a popular teen star after appearing in \"National Velvet\" (1944). She transitioned to more mature roles in the 1950s, when she starred in the comedy \"Father of the", "id": "19979789" }, { "contents": "Karin Booth\n\n\nKarin Booth (born June Francis Hoffman, June 19, 1916 – July 27, 2003) was an American film and TV actress of the 1940s to 1960s. She was born June Francis Hoffman on June 19, 1916, in Minneapolis, Minnesota to Francis T. and Ebba V. Hoffman. She lived in Portland and Los Angeles, attending John Marshall High School. She began her career modeling and being a chorus girl in 1939 and was signed under contract to Paramount Pictures in 1941 under the name Katharine Booth. After changing her", "id": "1386964" }, { "contents": "Saranya Ponvannan\n\n\ndebut in Mani Ratnam's production \"Nayakan,\" as the female lead opposite Kamal Haasan in 1987. She made her first Telugu appearance in 1988 film \"Neerajanam;\" her Malayalam debut was a year later in the 1989 film \"Artham\" starring opposite Mamooty. In 1996 almost during the end of her career as a lead actress she debuted in Kannada cinema in \"Appaji\". After marriage in 1995, she semi retired from acting. In 2000 she appeared playing the lead role in the comedy television series, \"", "id": "2557700" }, { "contents": "Franciska Gaal\n\n\n\", opposite Fredric March. She followed this with the comedy \"The Girl Downstairs\" (1938) with Franchot Tone, a remake of her Austrian success \"Catherine the Last\". In 1939, Gaal co-starred with Bing Crosby in the musical \"Paris Honeymoon\". She returned to Hungary in 1940 because of her mother's illness and remained there for the duration of World War II. In 1946, she began work on a new film in Budapest the Soviet-backed \"Renee XIV\" but filming was", "id": "19308441" }, { "contents": "Jo Ann Sayers\n\n\nstudent production and invited her to Hollywood for a screen test. She was offered a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her first credited film role was in 1938. In 1940, she was selected for the titular role in the Broadway production of \"My Sister Eileen\", opposite Shirley Booth, who was two decades Sayers' senior, which opened on December 26, 1940. She remained in the Broadway cast until June 1942, when she left to marry Anthony A. Bliss (1913-1991), a New", "id": "6389492" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nstar Baby Rosalie Essex (June Preisser), but Mickey gets in a fight with Jeff. Mickey tells Judge Black that his parents' show flopped. The judge gives Mickey 30 days to pay damages. Don and Molly sing \"Where or When\" with an orchestra of children. Mickey has a date with Baby and dines in her house. Mickey wants Baby in the show, which needs $287. She offers to pay it. Mickey smokes a cigar and leaves sick. Mickey tells Patsy that Baby has to play", "id": "9219785" }, { "contents": "Chela Ruiz\n\n\nChela Ruiz (5 June 1921 - 1 December 1999) was an Argentine actress. Her career spanned radio, film, television and stage, and in 1997 the Argentine Association of Actors awarded her the prestigious Premio Podestá for her theatrical work. Ruiz made her professional debut on Radio Splendid, along with her sister Nora Cullen, working as an actress and reader. In the 1940s and 1950s she was known for her narration of radio plays by Nené Cascallar. She began appearing on stage in 1942. A film career followed later", "id": "10450238" }, { "contents": "Petula Clark\n\n\nher film career in the late 1960s, starring in two big musical films. In \"Finian's Rainbow\" (1968), she starred opposite Fred Astaire and she was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for her performance. With her role, she again made history by becoming Astaire's final on-screen dance partner. The following year she was cast with Peter O'Toole in \"Goodbye, Mr. Chips\" (1969), a musical adaptation of the classic James Hilton novella", "id": "19868394" }, { "contents": "Sara Haden\n\n\n\". Haden later became a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract player in the late 1930s and had smallish roles in many of the studio's films, most notably in the Andy Hardy series starring Mickey Rooney, cast as the spinsterish Aunt Milly Forrest. Haden made her last film, \"Andy Hardy Comes Home\", in 1958, but was active on television until a 1965 guest spot on \"Dr. Kildare\". She was most notable for her stern, humorless characterisations such as a truant officer in Shirley Temple's \"", "id": "16961173" }, { "contents": "Rafaela Ottiano\n\n\n's last film was the musical comedy \"I Married an Angel\" (1942), starring Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. During her career in film, she appeared in approximately 45 motion pictures, opposite such actors as Barbara Stanwyck, Conrad Nagel, Peter Lorre, Zasu Pitts, and Katharine Hepburn. Ottiano lived in the Times Square area during the Prohibition Era and never married. She died in 1942, in the Boston home of her late parents, of intestinal cancer at the age of 54. She is buried at", "id": "9444719" }, { "contents": "Doris Davenport\n\n\nDoris Davenport, also known as Doris Jordan (January 1, 1917 – June 18, 1980) was an American film actress during the 1930s and early 1940s. Davenport was born in Moline, Illinois, but raised in Hollywood, California. She started auditioning for acting roles, and performed in her first film in 1934, titled \"Kid Millions\". From 1934 to 1939, she appeared in only five films, supporting herself by working in New York City as a fashion model between films. However, when she auditioned", "id": "2801211" }, { "contents": "Patricia Dane\n\n\nPatricia Dane (born Thelma Pearl Pippins, August 4, 1919 – June 5, 1995) was an American film actress of the 1940s. Dane was born Thelma Pearl Pippins in Blountstown, Florida and was also known as Thelma Byrnes after her stepfather. She began her career designing clothes for a New York City dress firm and was signed to an MGM contract in 1941. Dane's earliest appearances were two uncredited roles in \"Ziegfeld Girl\" and \"I'll Wait for You\" (both 1941). She played the", "id": "18013995" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\na young girl. Her new contract called for a starting salary of $75 a week and scales up to $1000 a week for the seventh year. In November 1935, Parker purchased a new home in Beverly Hills, California. The following year she joined the ballet school of Dave Gould at MGM, along with Maureen O'Sullivan. By the fall of 1936, Parker was studying singing. She played Marian Hardy in the extremely popular Andy Hardy film series in the late 1930s and early 1940s. She was in the original", "id": "18919251" }, { "contents": "Rooney Mara\n\n\nwas always afraid that I might fail.\" Her first and only role in high school was Juliet in \"Romeo and Juliet\", which she got after being signed up to audition by a friend. Mara acted in a few student films while at NYU, and then began her career in acting, first auditioning at the age of nineteen. Mara first appeared as an extra in films which starred her sister, including a bit-part in the 2005 direct-to-video horror film \"\". She found work", "id": "18311311" }, { "contents": "Georgiana Young\n\n\nBelzer and Gladys Royal. Along with her half-sisters, she was raised Roman Catholic. Young's acting career was short-lived, though she appeared in three films. Her debut role was as Berta Hubbard, sister of Mabel Gardiner Hubbard, in Irving Cummings's 1939 biographical film \"The Story of Alexander Graham Bell\", opposite her sisters Loretta (as Mabel), Sally, and Polly Ann. She would later have bit parts in two other films: \"No, No, Nanette\" (1940)", "id": "6269969" }, { "contents": "Glikeriya Bogdanova-Chesnokova\n\n\nmedals for her service. Following the war, in 1946, Bogdanova-Chesnokova returned to the Leningrad State Theatre of Musical Comedy. In 1947, she received the Stalin Prize. In the mid 1950s, Bogdanova-Chesnokova performed during three circus seasons with the clown, The act involved acrobatic actions. In 1955, Bogdanova-Chesnokova made her first significant film appearance. She played Maria Mikhailovna in the comedy film \"Tamer of Tigers\". Generally, Bogdanova-Chesnokova was a character actress taking supporting roles. However, in", "id": "5458931" }, { "contents": "Judi West\n\n\nJudi West (born December 15, 1942) is an American actress, best known for her supporting role opposite Jack Lemmon in the 1966 comedy film \"The Fortune Cookie. Judi West acted in a few films in the 1960s and also appeared in television in the 1960s through the early 1980s. Her notable film appearances include: She had earlier worked on the Broadway stage including \"A Family Affair\" (1962) and \"She Loves Me\" (1963-1964). Married from 1971 to 1989 to actor John Rubinstein", "id": "5957659" }, { "contents": "Judy Holliday\n\n\nJudy Holliday (born Judith Tuvim, June 21, 1921 – June 7, 1965) was an American actress, comedian, and singer. She began her career as part of a nightclub act before working in Broadway plays and musicals. Her success in the 1946 stage production of \"Born Yesterday\" as Billie Dawn led to her being cast in the 1950 film version for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. She appeared in several films", "id": "15453399" }, { "contents": "Elena Lucena\n\n\nMaría Elena Lucena Arcuri (25 September 1914 – 7 October 2015) was an Argentine film actress of the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema (1940–60). She began her career in radio in the 1930s and reached her greatest success with the role of \"Chimbela\", which was later depicted in film, theater and television. Her extensive film career includes approximately 50 films, including notable performances in \"Chimbela\" (1939) and \"Una noche cualquiera\" (1951). During the 1940s she participated in films with comedians", "id": "16119436" }, { "contents": "Florence Nash\n\n\nLynch in \"Within the Law\". She was a noted theater actor and comedian in vaudeville until the 1930s (appearing in sketches including \"In 1999\"), when she moved to Hollywood to try her luck with films. Her most notable role was as \"Nancy Blake\" in the 1939 MGM blockbuster \"The Women\". She also was the author of a book of verse, \"June Dusk\", published in 1918. After her retirement from acting in 1939, she spent the next decade living comfortably in", "id": "6401074" }, { "contents": "Doris Nolan\n\n\nher jitters, the show was a success and Nolan got positive reviews. When Nolan left the play, Woods sent her back to Hollywood, getting her a contract with Universal Pictures. She continued to move back and forth between movies and theater throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Her most prominent film appearance was in the 1938 version of \"Holiday\", where she played alongside Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Her subsequent film roles went downhill, but she reinvigorated her Broadway career with an 18-month stint in \"The Doughgirls\",", "id": "14779965" }, { "contents": "Marjorie Stapp\n\n\nMarjorie Stapp (September 17, 1921 – June 2, 2014), was an American actress who was mainly in low-budget pictures. Stapp began her film career when she signed a contract with the film studio 20th Century-Fox in the 1940s. Her first screen appearance was in \"The Kid from Brooklyn\", a 1946 film starring Danny Kaye. This was followed by another minor appearance in \"Linda, Be Good\" (1947). Eventually, she landed a leading role in the Western movie \"The", "id": "3140505" }, { "contents": "Roshini (actress)\n\n\nRoshini is an Indian film actress who has worked in the Telugu and Tamil film industries. She is the younger sister actress Jyothika and half sister to Nagma. After getting a recommendation by her sister Nagma, Roshini made her acting debut in Selva's comedy film \"Sishya\", where she played the lead role alongside Karthik. She subsequently starred in \"Master\" (1997), opposite Chiranjeevi. Roshini was keen to accept performance-orientated roles and turned down several offers in late 1997 to be a part of films in", "id": "12724581" }, { "contents": "Lola Albright\n\n\nmotion picture debut with a small singing role in the 1947 musical comedy \"The Unfinished Dance\" and then appeared the following year in two Judy Garland movies: \"The Pirate\" and \"Easter Parade\". She first gained studio and public notice in the 1949 film noir production \"Champion\" with her portrayal of the wife of a manipulative boxing manager; she falls for a prizefighter played by Kirk Douglas. For the next several years, she appeared in secondary roles in over 20 films, including several B westerns. Among", "id": "18089616" }, { "contents": "Marika Rökk\n\n\nthe 1930s and 1940s. She had the technical skill and glamour to carry off the formulaic plots and dialogue and provide German audiences with a home grown star to rival the popular American actresses. \"Der Bettelstudent\" and \"Gasparone\", followed by \"Hello Janine!\" in 1939, all starred her together with Johannes Heesters and established them as the \"dream couple\" of the musical comedy genre. In her appearances she cultivated her \"magyar\" accent conveying a notion of \"paprika\" exoticism. Her films, which", "id": "9061566" }, { "contents": "Fay Wray\n\n\nShe continued to star in various films, including \"The Richest Girl in the World\", a second film with Joel McCrea, but by the early 1940s, her appearances became less frequent. She retired from acting in 1942 after her second marriage but due to financial exigencies soon resumed her acting career, and over the next three decades, Wray appeared in several films and also frequently on television. Wray was cast in the 1953-54 ABC situation comedy \"The Pride of the Family\" as Catherine Morrison. Paul Hartman", "id": "10781506" }, { "contents": "Margaret O'Brien\n\n\n(1944), opposite Judy Garland. As Tootie Smith, the feisty but fragile little sister of Judy Garland, she was a bright point in a very good film, especially in her musical numbers with Garland and during a Halloween sequence in which she confronts a grouchy neighbor. For her performance, she was awarded a special juvenile Oscar in 1944. Margaret and June Allyson were known as \"The Town Criers\" of MGM. \"We were always in competition: I wanted to cry better than June, and June wanted", "id": "7504217" }, { "contents": "Ann Sothern\n\n\nSothern appeared in two musical films in 1948, \"April Showers\" opposite Jack Carson and \"Words and Music\" starring an all-star cast of MGM actors, singers and dancers. In 1949, she appeared in the Academy Award-winning film \"A Letter to Three Wives\" for 20th Century Fox. Sothern received excellent reviews for her performance but the acclaim failed to stimulate her career, which had begun to wane in the late 1940s. In 1949, Sothern contracted hepatitis which she would battle for the next three", "id": "2026182" }, { "contents": "Jane Isbell\n\n\nWar soldier who once saved the life of Andrew Jackson. Clark Isbell's father was also a cousin of Alabama Governor William J. Samford. The Isbells moved to Los Angeles when Jane was an infant. The elder of two sisters, she began modeling and appearing as an extra in films when only four years old. In 1932, she made her first Mickey McGuire comedy starring Mickey Rooney and would eventually make five films in the Mickey McGuire series, similar to the Our Gang films. She grew up with child stars for playmates", "id": "12640286" }, { "contents": "Shirley Palmer (actress)\n\n\n1930 she appeared with Dorothy Sebastian and Neil Hamilton in \"Ladies Must Play\", her only film of that year. In 1932 she appeared in \"This Sporting Age\", and in 1933 she starred in probably her most recognizable role, starring opposite John Wayne in \"Somewhere in Sonora\". It would be her last credited role. She had two uncredited roles following that film, one the same year and the other in 1934, after which her career ended. She married once, to writer John Collier, and", "id": "3797930" }, { "contents": "Betty Grable\n\n\n(1930), starring Eddie Cantor. Although she received no on-screen credit for her performance, she led the film's opening musical number, entitled \"Cowboys\". In 1932, she signed a contract with RKO Radio Pictures, and she was assigned to a succession of acting, singing, and dancing classes at the studio's drama school. Her first film for the studio, \"Probation\" (1932), provided the 14-year-old Grable with her first credited screen role. Over the next few years", "id": "17559458" }, { "contents": "Erika Jayne\n\n\n, and pink.\" Soon after she gave birth to a son, Thomas Zizzo, Jr. After the couple divorced a few years later, she relocated to Los Angeles to pursue her dream of becoming a singer and performer. Early in her career, Girardi worked as a waitress to support herself between acting jobs. Girardi began her acting career in the early 1990s by appearing in small roles in several American television series and films. Her first on-screen appearance was a role as Suzanne Morton in the episode \"Prescription for", "id": "22006264" }, { "contents": "Thelma Scott\n\n\nThelma Scott (17 June 1913 – 23 November 2006) was an Australian character actress and television director whose 70-year career in theatre, radio, film and Australian television made her one of her country's most recognizable and beloved personalities. Having started her career in the early 1930s in theatre and film productions, she became one of the nation's biggest radio performers, during the 1940s featuring in productions such as \"Big Sister\" and \"Blue Hills\". She returned to made for TV films in the early late 1950s and", "id": "7852633" } ]
June Preisser ( June 26 , 1920 -- September 19 , 1984 ) was an American actress , briefly popular in musical films during the late 1930s and early 1940s , many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat . Born in New Orleans , Louisiana , Preisser was one of six children , and was an underweight baby . Her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age , in an attempt to build her strength . There she , and her sister Cherry , learnt acrobatics . Their mother was keen to have them follow a career in showbusiness , especially when their father died suddenly , leaving the family with few options to make a living . When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home , and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville , and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936 . The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States , and also performed in Europe , most notably for . Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage , and June was signed to a film contract by . Her first film Dancing Co-Ed ( 1939 ) provided only a small part , but her next film , Babes in Arms ( 1939 ) , gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and [START_ENT] Judy Garland [END_ENT] . She performed with Rooney and Garland again in Strike Up the Band ( 1940 ) , and with Rooney in two " Andy Hardy " films , Judge Hardy and Son ( 1939 ) and Andy Hardy 's Private Secretary ( 1941 ) . Gallant Sons ( 1940 ) placed her in a comedic murder mystery , and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in ( 1941 ) , and followed this with Sweater Girl ( 1942 ) , opposite Eddie Bracken . She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry , and the birth of a son , Ricky . By this time , MGM had little interest in promoting her , and she left to work for Monogram Pictures . She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years , and played the character " Dodie Rogers " in seven " high school " comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948 . Her final film was ( 1948 ) , and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of Annie Get Your Gun
5e884751-47a1-46ab-b5e5-e455b9d39010_June_Preisse:6
[{"answer": "Judy Garland", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "58719", "title": "Judy Garland"}]}]
[ { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n, and June was signed to a film contract by MGM. Her first film, \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), provided only a small part, but her next film, \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. She performed with Rooney and Garland again in \"Strike Up the Band\" (1940), and with Rooney in two \"Andy Hardy\" films, \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939) and \"Andy Hardy", "id": "17067760" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nJune Preisser (June 26, 1920 – September 19, 1984) was an American actress, popular in musical films during the late 1930s and through the 1940s, many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat. Born in New Orleans, Preisser was one of six children. An underweight child, her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age, in an attempt to build her strength. There she, and her sister Cherry, learned acrobatics. Their mother was keen to have them follow a career", "id": "17067758" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n's Private Secretary\" (1941). \"Gallant Sons\" (1940) placed her in a comedic murder mystery, and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in \"Henry Aldrich for President\" (1941), and followed this with \"Sweater Girl\" (1942), opposite Eddie Bracken. She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry, and the birth of a son, Ricky. By this time, MGM had little interest in promoting her, and she left to work", "id": "17067761" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nfor Monogram Pictures. She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years, and played the character \"Dodie Rogers\" in seven \"high school\" comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948. Her final film was Music Man (1948), and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of \"Annie Get Your Gun\", she retired from acting. She divorced not long after, and taught dancing and acrobatics in Los Angeles, before moving with her son to Florida. They", "id": "17067762" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nin show business, especially when their father died suddenly, leaving the family with few options to make a living. When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home, and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville, and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936. The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States, and also performed in Europe, most notably for George VI of the United Kingdom. Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage", "id": "17067759" }, { "contents": "Melody Trail\n\n\nand Prejudice\" (1940). In 1939, she played the role of Carreen O'Hara, the sister of Scarlet O'Hara, in the film \"Gone with the Wind\". From 1937 to 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. She retired from films in 1950. Rutherford died on June 11, 2012 at her home in Beverly Hills, California. \"Melody Trail\" was filmed August 21–27, 1935. The film had an operating budget of $15,075", "id": "2111015" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nHardy Family movies as a literal girl-next-door to Rooney's character Andy Hardy, in \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938), although Hardy's love interest was played by Lana Turner. They teamed as lead characters for the first time in \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), ultimately appearing in five additional films, including Hardy films \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\" (1940) and \"Life Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland stated that she, Rooney, and other young", "id": "13593082" }, { "contents": "Annie Get Your Gun (film)\n\n\n, MGM's biggest musical comedy star, was originally cast as Annie Oakley. She recorded all her songs for the soundtrack and worked for two months under the direction of Busby Berkeley and dance director Robert Alton. Berkeley and Garland had worked together previously in the late 1930s and early 1940s in a successful series of backstage musicals teaming her with fellow juvenile star Mickey Rooney. Berkeley had been fired from the Garland/Rooney musical \"Girl Crazy\" in 1943 due to personality clashes with musical director Roger Edens and for driving Garland very", "id": "13779025" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nYear for her live recording \"Judy at Carnegie Hall\" (1961). Garland began performing in vaudeville as a child with her two older sisters, and was later signed to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a teenager. Although she appeared in more than two dozen films with MGM and received acclaim for many different roles, she is often best remembered for her portrayal of Dorothy Gale in \"The Wizard of Oz\" (1939). Garland was a frequent on-screen partner of both Mickey Rooney and Gene Kelly,", "id": "13593062" }, { "contents": "Louise LaPlanche\n\n\n, portraying a gypsy girl in \"The Hunchback of Notre Dame\" in 1923. Both LaPlanche began competing in California beauty pageants. In 1939, Louise LaPlanche was crowned Miss Catalina. Her Miss Catalina win led to a film contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). She appeared in the 1940 MGM musical film, \"Strike Up the Band\", which starred Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. LaPlanche later left MGM and signed on to Paramount Studios. She was cast in several Paramount films, including 1942's", "id": "3022959" }, { "contents": "Bonita Granville\n\n\nfilm success led to Granville reprising the role in three sequels from 1938 to 1939, including \"Nancy Drew... Reporter\" (1939). As a young adult, she was once again cast in supporting roles, often in prestigious films such as \"Now, Voyager\" (1942), as well as two Andy Hardy films with Mickey Rooney, \"Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble\" (1944) and \"Love Laughs at Andy Hardy\" (1946). She is also remembered for her starring role in the World", "id": "12873960" }, { "contents": "Eve Arden\n\n\nThis was followed by roles in the crime film \"The Forgotten Woman\" (1939), and the comedy \"At the Circus\" (1939), opposite Groucho Marx, a role that would require her to perform acrobatics. In 1940, she appeared opposite Clark Gable in \"Comrade X\", followed by the drama \"Manpower\" (1941), opposite Marlene Dietrich. She also appeared in a supporting part in the Red Skelton comedy \"Whistling in the Dark\" (1941), and the romantic comedy \"", "id": "10321268" }, { "contents": "Shirley Temple\n\n\nher departure from Twentieth Century-Fox, Shirley was signed by MGM for her comeback; the studio made plans to team her with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney for the Andy Hardy series. The idea was quickly abandoned. The next idea was teaming her with Garland and Rooney for the musical \"Babes on Broadway\". Fearing that either of the latter two could easily upstage Temple, MGM replaced her with Virginia Weidler. As a result, her only film for Metro was \"Kathleen\" in 1941, a story about an", "id": "7504264" }, { "contents": "Barbara Read\n\n\ncompany. When she failed to receive any roles because of her lack of experience, she joined the Laguna Beach Players theater, where she acted in a new play each month for two years. Her first film appearance was one of the three principal girls in the 1936 comedy film \"Three Smart Girls\", which also starred Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. From 1937 through 1939, Read appeared in nine films, most notably starring in \"The Spellbinder\", opposite Lee Tracy. From 1940 through 1948, she appeared in", "id": "5406875" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy\n\n\nLife Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland's character, Betsy Booth, is an aspiring singer and she sings in the first two of these films. However, although Garland songs were planned for the final film, they were eventually dropped. Unlike Garland-Rooney films outside of the \"Andy Hardy\" series, Rooney's Hardy character is not a musician, so Garland and Rooney do not perform together in the Hardy films. Rooney played the character continuously from age 16 to 25, when he appeared in", "id": "7714497" }, { "contents": "Fay Holden\n\n\nthe depression era. Eventually they left Vancouver and moved to Hollywood. Holden appeared in 46 motion pictures between 1935 and 1958, but is best known for her recurring role as Emily Hardy, mother of Mickey Rooney's character in the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" film series. The series was enormously popular in the late 1930s and early '40s, and Holden was in 15 of the 16 Hardy movies, surpassed only by Rooney, who was in all 16. Holden is also remembered for her performance as Hazel, the mother", "id": "15552902" }, { "contents": "Margaret Early\n\n\nBrent, Bette Davis, and Fay Bainter. She later became a freelance actress and found herself working in various roles at such studios as RKO, Warner Bros., and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her other screen roles include parts in \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939), \"Strike Up The Band\" (1940), \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" (1941), and \"Stage Door Canteen\" (1943). She made her last screen appearance in \"Cinderella Jones\" (1946)", "id": "11267109" }, { "contents": "Sheila Darcy\n\n\n1935 her career had taken off, and from then until 1941 she had roles in 41 films. In most of her early films, she played the heroine in B-movies, often Westerns. Darcy's best known roles were as the female lead in cliffhangers, such as the 1939 film \"Zorro's Fighting Legion\", in which she performed opposite Reed Hadley. She also played the Dragon Lady in the serial \"Terry and the Pirates\", released in 1940. In Westerns, she often played opposite popular cowboy", "id": "21067295" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nIn 1937, Rooney made his first film alongside Judy Garland with \"Thoroughbreds Don't Cry\". Garland and Rooney became close friends as they co-starred in future films and became a successful song-and-dance team. Audiences delighted in seeing the \"playful interactions between the two stars showcase a wonderful chemistry\". Along with three of the \"Andy Hardy\" films, where she portrayed a girl attracted to Andy, they appeared together in a string of successful musicals, including \"Babes in Arms\" (1939", "id": "5690267" }, { "contents": "Brenda Marshall\n\n\nArdis Ankerson (September 29, 1915 – July 30, 1992), known as Brenda Marshall, was a Filipino-born, American film actress. Marshall made her first film appearance in the 1939 \"Espionage Agent\". The following year, she played the leading lady to Errol Flynn in \"The Sea Hawk\". After divorcing actor Richard Gaines in 1940, she married William Holden in 1941, and her own career soon slowed. She starred opposite James Cagney in \"Captains of the Clouds\" (1942).", "id": "14392731" }, { "contents": "Julie Haydon\n\n\nmade by MGM. In 1932, she signed with RKO, and her first major role came that year in \"The Conquerors\", directed by William Wellman Her most notable performance came in 1935's \"The Scoundrel\" playing opposite Noël Coward, but, despite a new contract with MGM, only a few more films were to come in her short career, including \"A Family Affair\" (1937), the initial movie in the Andy Hardy series. Some have held that it was Haydon and not Fay Wray who", "id": "19690260" }, { "contents": "Jean Darling\n\n\nAssociation. She turned down an offer to appear alongside Mickey Rooney in one of the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" movies, and went on Broadway, making her debut in the musical \"Count Me In\" in 1942. Darling's stage career hit a real high when she landed the role of Carrie Pipperidge in the original Broadway production of \"Carousel\" in 1945. She appeared in 850 consecutive performances. Her role as Carrie Pipperidge helped her with parts for radio and TV in the 1950s. She hosted her own television show", "id": "1616169" }, { "contents": "List of Lana Turner performances\n\n\nLana Turner was an American actress who appeared in over fifty films during her career, which spanned four decades. Discovered in 1937 at age 16, she signed a contract with Warner Bros. and appeared in several films for the studio before signing a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The studio's co-founder, Louis B. Mayer, helped further her career by casting her in several youth-oriented comedies and musicals, including \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941),", "id": "7891475" }, { "contents": "Marguerite Chapman\n\n\ncontract to Warner Brothers in 1941, and then with Columbia from 1942 to 1948. She made her film debut in 1940, working for the next two years in small roles. In 1942, her big break came with Republic Pictures when she was cast in the leading female role in the twelve-part adventure film serial \"Spy Smasher\", a production that has been ranked among the best serials ever made. Chapman soon began receiving more leading roles and appeared opposite important stars such as Edward G. Robinson and George Sanders.", "id": "2722471" }, { "contents": "Jeanne Cagney\n\n\nRKO Pictures. However, she signed a long-term contract with Paramount Pictures. She appeared in 19 films between 1939 and 1965, including four films with her brother James: \"Yankee Doodle Dandy\" (1942), \"The Time of Your Life\" (1948), \"A Lion Is in the Streets\" (1953), and \"Man of a Thousand Faces\" (1957). Cagney gave a noted performance opposite Mickey Rooney in the film noir crime film \"Quicksand\" (1950). Cagney", "id": "6954933" }, { "contents": "Little Annie Rooney (1925 film)\n\n\nLittle Annie Rooney is a 1925 American silent comedy-drama film starring Mary Pickford and directed by William Beaudine. Pickford, one of the most successful actresses of the silent era, was best known throughout her career for her iconic portrayals of penniless young girls. After generating only modest box office revenue playing adults in her previous two films, Pickford wrote and produced \"Little Annie Rooney\" to cater to silent film audiences. Though she was 33 years old, Pickford played the title role, an Irish girl living in the slums", "id": "236551" }, { "contents": "Edith Barrett\n\n\n, she married leading man Vincent Price in 1938. The marriage ended in 1948. She and Price had one son, author/poet and environmental activist Vincent Barrett Price (born 1940). Her biggest Broadway success was as star of the now-obscure production \"Mrs. Moonlight\". In her first film, \"Ladies in Retirement\" (1941), she played one of the two half-witted half-sisters of Ida Lupino's homicidal character. Her best remembered movie role is possibly Mrs. Holland's mother-", "id": "18853813" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\nHardy film, \"A Family Affair\", in 1937. Mickey Rooney played Andy Hardy in the series, supported by Lewis Stone, Ann Rutherford, and Fay Holden. The movies were directed by George B. Seitz. Parker's character, Marion, appeared in most of the films, and her romances were a recurring feature of the series. Though she and the character she played were absent from the last two Andy Hardy films of the 1940s, Parker came out of retirement to play Marian Hardy in one more movie,", "id": "18919252" }, { "contents": "Nancy Walker\n\n\nrole provided Walker with her film debut when she signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to make a movie version, starring Lucille Ball (filmed in 1943). In 1943, she also appeared with Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in the second film version of \"Girl Crazy\". Her next film, \"Broadway Rhythm\", in which she had a featured musical number backed by Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra, \"Milkman, Keep Those Bottles Quiet\", ended Walker's contract with Metro. Her dry comic", "id": "9657966" }, { "contents": "List of Gloria Stuart performances\n\n\nstarred in two films opposite Shirley Temple: \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936), and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938), both for 20th Century Fox. She subsequently co-starred in \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939) opposite Don Ameche. Dissatisfied with her career in film, Stuart shifted her focus to stage acting. Between 1940 and 1942, Stuart appeared in numerous summer stock plays in New England, including a 1940 production of \"Our Town\" in which she starred alongside its playwright", "id": "19503931" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nBabes in Arms is the 1939 American film version of the 1937 Broadway musical of the same name. The film version stars Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland, and features Charles Winninger, Guy Kibbee, June Preisser, Grace Hayes, and Betty Jaynes. The film concerns a group of youngsters trying to put on a show to prove their vaudevillian parents wrong and make it to Broadway. The original Broadway script was significantly revamped, restructured, and rewritten to accommodate Hollywood's needs. In 1921, vaudeville performer Joe Moran (Winninger)", "id": "9219782" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nhim when he transferred to MGM in 1938. Turner attracted attention by playing the role of a murder victim in her first film, LeRoy's \"They Won't Forget\" (1937), and she later transitioned into featured roles, often appearing as an ingénue. During the early 1940s, Turner established herself as a leading actress and one of MGM's top performers, appearing in such films as the film noir \"Johnny Eager\" (1941); the musical \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941); the horror film", "id": "11929991" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nthe stature of most leading men. He appeared in a number of films, including \"Words and Music\" in 1948, which paired him for the last time with Garland on film (he appeared with her on one episode as a guest on \"The Judy Garland Show\"). He briefly starred in a CBS radio series, \"Shorty Bell\", in the summer of 1948, and reprised his role as \"Andy Hardy\", with most of the original cast, in a syndicated radio version of \"The", "id": "5690276" }, { "contents": "Donna Reed\n\n\nmany starlets at MGM, she played Mickey Rooney's love interest in an Andy Hardy film, in her case the hugely popular \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942). She was second billed in a children's film, \"Mokey\" (1942). Reed played a love interest in \"Calling Dr. Gillespie\" (1942) and \"Apache Trail\" (1942), then did a thriller with Edward Arnold, \"Eyes in the Night\" (1942), directed by Fred Zinnemann. Reed had", "id": "13840841" }, { "contents": "Evalyn Knapp\n\n\nHis Private Secretary\", a light comedy in which Wayne portrays a suit-and-tie wearing playboy determined to win her over. She also appeared in \"Corruption\" that year opposite Preston Foster. One of her better known film roles was opposite Ken Maynard in the 1934 film \"In Old Santa Fe\" featuring Gene Autry in his first screen appearance, in which he sang with a bluegrass band. She worked through 1941, but her career slowed afterward. In 1943, she played her last role, uncredited,", "id": "560741" }, { "contents": "Kathryn Grayson\n\n\nexercise. Within a year, Grayson had her first screen test. However, the studio executives were not satisfied, and she went through a further six months of lessons until she made her first film appearance in 1941's \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" as the character's secretary Kathryn Land. In the film, she takes part in three musical numbers. Two further films were planned for Grayson in 1941; \"White House Girl\", which was later made in 1948 with Durbin, and \"Very Warm for May", "id": "20045432" }, { "contents": "Susi Nicoletti\n\n\nSusi Nicoletti (3 September 1918 – 5 June 2005) was a Bavarian-born actress best remembered today for over 100 supporting roles mostly in comedy films. She was born as Susanne Emilie Luise Adele Habersack in Munich, but spent most of her childhood with her parents in Amsterdam. Back in Munich, she made her stage debut at age 13. Two years later she became a ballerina. In the early 1930s she turned to cabaret. In 1939, she was offered her first film role. In 1940 she moved to", "id": "6091110" }, { "contents": "Dorothy Morris\n\n\nShe did a screen test for the female lead in \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942), but lost to Donna Reed. Appearing in bit parts in several of the studio's more successful films, Morris was signed to a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract in 1941. For one of her early film roles, \"Cry 'Havoc'\" (1943), she affected a British accent. Her next picture was the well-received drama \"The Human Comedy\", which featured a star cast,", "id": "323808" }, { "contents": "The Courtship of Andy Hardy\n\n\nThe Courtship of Andy Hardy is a 1942 film, part of the Andy Hardy series. It gave an early role to Donna Reed although Mickey Rooney had lobbied for his then-wife Ava Gardner to have her part. Within a few months of the film's release, she filed for divorce. This was the 12th entry in the long-running \"Andy Hardy\" series of sixteen. When Carvel teenager and new tow truck-owner Andy Hardy is stopped by a policeman for driving without a license plate, a radio", "id": "20736523" }, { "contents": "Mae Busch\n\n\nMae Busch (18 June 1891 – 20 April 1946) was an Australian-born actress who worked in both silent and sound films in early Hollywood. In the latter part of her career she appeared in many Laurel and Hardy comedies, where she frequently played Hardy's shrewish wife. Mae Busch was born Annie May Busch in Melbourne, Victoria to popular Australian vaudeville performers Elizabeth Maria Lay and Frederick William Busch. Her mother had been active since 1883 under the stage names \"Dora Devere\" and then \"Dora Busch\";", "id": "10830566" }, { "contents": "Hannelore Schroth\n\n\ndebut at the age of nine in 1931's Max Ophüls' comedy \"Dann schon lieber Lebertran\" opposite her mother. Until age sixteen she attended drama school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Her early film successes include \"Spiel im Sommerwind\" (1938), \"Weisser Flieder\" (1939) and \"Kitty und die Weltkonferenz\" (1939) - the latter of which was her first leading role. During World War II, Hannelore Schroth continued performing in films. Unlike her father, Heinrich Schroth, who was by", "id": "16153872" }, { "contents": "Lupe Vélez\n\n\npopular actress, RKO Pictures did not renew her contract in 1934. Over the next few years, Vélez worked for various studio as a freelance actress; she also spent two years in England where she filmed \"The Morals of Marcus\" and \"Gypsy Melody\" (both 1936). She returned to Los Angeles the following year where she appeared in the final part of the Wheeler & Woolsey comedy \"High Flyers\" (1937). Vélez made her final appearance on Broadway in the 1938 musical \"You Never Know\"", "id": "20716058" }, { "contents": "Katharine Kavanaugh\n\n\nher biggest claims to fame was helping to create the Jones Family characters, who would appear in 17 low-budget films between 1936 and 1940. The first film in the series, \"Every Saturday Night\", was released in 1936, and Kavanaugh would also co-write \"Educating Father\", released later that same year. While her screenwriting career cooled in the late 1930s, she continued writing plays that were produced in the Los Angeles area until her death in 1942. She and her husband, Oliver Ziegfeld (", "id": "21036559" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\n, including \"The Wizard of Oz\" and \"Babes in Arms\". She was the fourth person to receive the award as well as only one of twelve in history to ever be presented with one. Garland starred in three films released in 1940: \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\", \"Strike Up the Band\", and \"Little Nellie Kelly\". In the last, she played her first adult role, a dual role of both mother and daughter. \"Little Nellie Kelly\" was purchased from George M.", "id": "13593089" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nliving on her own. In late 1949 Hardi and her husband moved to Jakarta. Two years later she made her feature film debut in a bit role in the Produksi Film Negara (PFN; State Film Corporation)'s \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". The following year she took a starring role in another PFN film, \"Si Pintjang\", portraying an old woman; as she was only twenty-four, she was artificially aged with make-up. That same year she appeared as the lead love interest in", "id": "15623084" }, { "contents": "Jane Frazee\n\n\nB film \"Melody and Moonlight\" (1940) for Republic Pictures. Shortly after the film's release she was signed by Universal Pictures and was featured in \"Buck Privates\", the high-grossing 1941 comedy/World War II film starring Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The strong impression she made in that film elevated her to leading-lady roles in Universal's popular \"B\" musicals, usually appearing opposite Robert Paige. She left Universal in late 1942, when she married actor-director Glenn Tryon, who", "id": "11708629" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\n\n\nAndy Hardy Meets Debutante is a 1940 American romantic comedy film directed by George B. Seitz. The film stars Lewis Stone, Mickey Rooney, Cecilia Parker, Fay Holden and Judy Garland. It is the ninth of the \"Andy Hardy\" full-length film series. Andy Hardy (Mickey Rooney) from Carvel becomes infatuated with a well-known young socialite, Daphne Fowler (Diana Lewis), from New York City. Even though he hasn’t met the woman in person, he drops her name to his friends and", "id": "11382757" }, { "contents": "Martha Vickers\n\n\nplayed minor roles in several films during the early 1940s, working first at Universal Studios and then at RKO Pictures. She next went to Warner Bros., where \"they gave her the star push, rearranging her surname to 'Vickers.'\" Her work there included the role of Carmen Sternwood, the promiscuous, drug-addicted younger sister of Lauren Bacall's character in \"The Big Sleep\" (1946). She also starred in a musical, \"The Time, the Place and the Girl\", followed by", "id": "721594" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nwas over, she was summoned back to work and ultimately performed two songs as a guest in the Rodgers and Hart biopic \"Words and Music\" (1948), which was her last appearance with Mickey Rooney. Despite the all-star cast, \"Words and Music\" barely broke even at the box office. Having regained her strength, as well as some needed weight during her suspension, Garland felt much better and in the fall of 1948, she returned to MGM to replace a pregnant June Allyson for the musical", "id": "13593101" }, { "contents": "Martha O'Driscoll\n\n\n's Dangerous\" (1937), she was not credited by name. In the Deanna Durbin vehicle \"Mad About Music\" (1937), she was billed as \"pretty girl.\" Her face appeared on such advertisements as Charm-Kurl Supreme Cold Wave and Max Factor Hollywood Face Powder. Universal lent O'Driscoll to MGM for parts in \"The Secret of Dr Kildare\" (1939) and \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1940), starring Mickey Rooney. RKO, however, gave O'Driscoll her first two starring", "id": "20196774" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nMarlia Hardi (also Marlia Hardy; 10 March 192718 June 1984) was an Indonesian film actress active from 1951 to 1983. Born in the Central Javan city of Magelang, she took to the stage in the 1940s before moving to Jakarta in 1949. Two years later she made her feature film debut in \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". Over the next two decades she appeared in over seventy films, became recognized for her depictions of mothers, and received the Citra Award for Best Supporting Actress. Despite her productiveness, however", "id": "15623082" }, { "contents": "Susan Peters\n\n\nLos Angeles. After completing filming of the comedy \"Andy Hardy's Double Life\" (1942) in which she had a lead role, Mervyn LeRoy cast Peters in the drama \"Random Harvest\", in which she portrayed a young woman who falls in love with her step-uncle. The film was one of the top 25 highest-earning films of the year, and Peters's performance garnered her critical acclaim, earning her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. The success of \"Random Harvest\" led", "id": "17519590" }, { "contents": "Paulette Goddard\n\n\nshe appeared as an uncredited extra in two films, the Laurel and Hardy short film \"Berth Marks\" (1929), and George Fitzmaurice's drama \"The Locked Door\" (1929). Following her divorce, she briefly visited Europe before returning to Hollywood in late 1930 with her mother. Her second attempt at acting was no more successful than the first, as she landed work only as an extra. In 1930, she signed her first film contract with producer Samuel Goldwyn to appear as a Goldwyn Girl in \"", "id": "3980436" }, { "contents": "Trixie Friganza\n\n\nTrixie Friganza (born Delia O'Callaghan; November 29, 1870 – February 27, 1955) began her career as an operetta soubrette, working her way from the chorus to starring in musical comedies to having her own feature act on the vaudeville circuit. She transitioned to film in the early 1920s mostly playing small characters that were quirky and comedic and retired from the stage in 1940 due to health concerns. She spent her last years teaching drama to young women in a convent school and when she died she left everything to the convent", "id": "13928014" }, { "contents": "Susan Hayward\n\n\nSusan Hayward (born Edythe Marrenner; June 30, 1917 – March 14, 1975) was an American actress and model. After working as a fashion model, Hayward traveled to Hollywood in 1937. She secured a film contract and played several small supporting roles over the next few years. By the late 1940s, the quality of her film roles had improved, and she achieved recognition for her dramatic abilities with the first of five Academy Award nominations for Best Actress for her performance as an alcoholic in \"Smash-Up,", "id": "14143916" }, { "contents": "Nella Walker\n\n\nyear to 1938, she had 23 film appearances. Her biggest film appearance during this period was in \"Young Dr. Kildare\" with Lionel Barrymore and Lew Ayres. Throughout the 1930s, her career was strong, and despite never being a premier star, she repeatedly had solid acting roles. She finished the decade strongly in 1939 with nine film roles, only three of which were uncredited. The 1940s mirrored her success of the previous decade in many ways, with appearances in 37 films from 1940 to 1947. Later in her", "id": "4686869" }, { "contents": "May Wallace\n\n\nMay Wallace (August 23, 1877 – December 11, 1938) was an American film actress. She appeared in 63 films between 1914 and 1939. Wallace was born in Russiaville, Indiana and died in Los Angeles, California, where she worked in Hollywood as a film actress. She often played supporting roles for producer Hal Roach in his Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang comedies, mostly in maternal roles. Wallace was married to Thomas W. Maddox until her death, they had one daughter and one son. She died of", "id": "9169980" }, { "contents": "Ora Carew\n\n\na film editor. Ora's birth year has been listed as 1893, on her death certificate and is also what her grave says, but Utah birth index and the 1900 census indicate 1891. She was educated by private tutors and at Roland Hall Seminary. After her father died on June 19, 1896, her mother moved with her three children to California. Her screen career began with MGM, following numerous engagements in vaudeville, musical comedy and stock. Some of her most notable films with MGM were \"Go West,", "id": "19207733" }, { "contents": "Eilene Janssen\n\n\nMary Eilene Janssen (born May 25, 1938), is a retired American film and television actress. Eilene Janssen was born in Los Angeles, California on May 25, 1938, to parents Henry Janssen and Mary Ellen Thompson. She began her film career as a child actress in the early 1940s. With her father being a longtime worker for Universal Studios, Eilene Janssen made her first screen appearance in the 1940 film \"Sandy Gets Her Man\". She continued to have bit parts in several movies such as \"Two", "id": "12362318" }, { "contents": "Ann Rutherford\n\n\nLouis Mayer originally refused the loan because he considered the role too minor, but Rutherford passionately appealed to him to change his mind. In December 1939, while promoting the new movie, Rutherford visited six Confederate Army veterans at the Confederate Soldiers Home near Atlanta. One of the veterans gave Rutherford a rose corsage tied with Confederate colors. From 1937 until 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. Her first film in this series was \"You're Only Young Once\"", "id": "6472820" }, { "contents": "Gloria Stuart\n\n\nMan\" (1933), followed by roles in the Shirley Temple musicals \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936) and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938). She also starred as Queen Anne in the musical comedy \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939). Beginning in 1940, Stuart slowed her film career, instead performing in regional theater in New England. In 1945, following a tenure as a contract player for Twentieth Century Fox, Stuart abandoned her acting career and shifted to a career as an artist", "id": "3454792" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nand Judy Garland in the Andy Hardy film \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938). During the shoot, Turner completed her studies with an educational social worker, allowing her to graduate high school that year. The film was a box-office success, and her appearance in it as a flirtatious high school student convinced studio head Louis B. Mayer that Turner could be the next Jean Harlow, a sex symbol who had died six months before Turner's arrival at MGM. Mayer helped further Turner's career by giving her", "id": "11930007" }, { "contents": "Linda Darnell\n\n\nLinda Darnell (born Monetta Eloyse Darnell, October 16, 1923April 10, 1965) was an American film actress. Darnell progressed from modeling as a child to acting in theater and film. At the encouragement of her mother, she made her first film in 1939, and appeared in supporting roles in big-budget films for 20th Century Fox throughout the 1940s. She rose to fame with co-starring roles opposite Tyrone Power in adventure films, and established a main character career after her role in \"Forever Amber\" (", "id": "9752181" }, { "contents": "Marcia Mae Jones\n\n\nsigned her to co-star with Jackie Moran in a few rustic romances; when this series lapsed, both Jones and Moran joined Monogram's popular action-comedy series starring Frankie Darro. As a young adult, she continued to work in motion pictures, notably in \"Nine Girls\" (1944) and \"Arson, Inc.\" (1948). Like many familiar faces of the 1940s, she appeared on numerous television programs. In 1951 she appeared as comic foil to Buster Keaton in Keaton's filmed TV series.", "id": "5963847" }, { "contents": "Peggy Drake\n\n\nPeggy Drake (6 October 1922 – 19 September 2014), was an Austrian film and television actress. She primarily appeared in B-movies of the 1940s. Born Lieselotte Mayer in Vienna, Austria, she moved to the United States with her family at the age of three. Her acting career started with an uncredited role in the film \"Too Many Girls\" (1940). Her career was short-lived, appearing in five films between 1940 and 1942, most notably in the serial film \"King of the", "id": "8901594" }, { "contents": "Signe Hasso\n\n\nfilm in Sweden. In 1933, she made her first film, \"Tystnadens hus\", with German film director/cameraman Harry Hasso, whom she married the same year. They had a son by the time she was 19. They divorced in 1941. In 1940, she moved to the United States, where she signed a contract with RKO Pictures, who promoted her as \"the next Garbo\". With few RKO roles forthcoming, she turned to the stage to make a living. According to the Internet Broadway", "id": "19347089" }, { "contents": "Rita La Roy\n\n\nand the \"cobra dance\" in which her feet and legs were tied together under a stylized snakeskin so that she danced by undulating her torso.\" In 1929, she made her film debut in \"The Delightful Rogue\", starring opposite matinee idol Rod La Rocque. Over the next several years, working as part of the RKO Radio Pictures stable, she appeared in both starring and supporting roles. While her final significant role was in the 1940 comedy-mystery \"Hold That Woman!\", she had several small", "id": "13534727" }, { "contents": "Elizabeth Taylor\n\n\nto socially prominent American parents, Taylor moved with her family to Los Angeles in 1939. She made her acting debut in a minor role in the Universal Pictures film \"There's One Born Every Minute\" (1942) but the studio ended her contract after a year. She was then signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and became a popular teen star after appearing in \"National Velvet\" (1944). She transitioned to more mature roles in the 1950s, when she starred in the comedy \"Father of the", "id": "19979789" }, { "contents": "Karin Booth\n\n\nKarin Booth (born June Francis Hoffman, June 19, 1916 – July 27, 2003) was an American film and TV actress of the 1940s to 1960s. She was born June Francis Hoffman on June 19, 1916, in Minneapolis, Minnesota to Francis T. and Ebba V. Hoffman. She lived in Portland and Los Angeles, attending John Marshall High School. She began her career modeling and being a chorus girl in 1939 and was signed under contract to Paramount Pictures in 1941 under the name Katharine Booth. After changing her", "id": "1386964" }, { "contents": "Saranya Ponvannan\n\n\ndebut in Mani Ratnam's production \"Nayakan,\" as the female lead opposite Kamal Haasan in 1987. She made her first Telugu appearance in 1988 film \"Neerajanam;\" her Malayalam debut was a year later in the 1989 film \"Artham\" starring opposite Mamooty. In 1996 almost during the end of her career as a lead actress she debuted in Kannada cinema in \"Appaji\". After marriage in 1995, she semi retired from acting. In 2000 she appeared playing the lead role in the comedy television series, \"", "id": "2557700" }, { "contents": "Franciska Gaal\n\n\n\", opposite Fredric March. She followed this with the comedy \"The Girl Downstairs\" (1938) with Franchot Tone, a remake of her Austrian success \"Catherine the Last\". In 1939, Gaal co-starred with Bing Crosby in the musical \"Paris Honeymoon\". She returned to Hungary in 1940 because of her mother's illness and remained there for the duration of World War II. In 1946, she began work on a new film in Budapest the Soviet-backed \"Renee XIV\" but filming was", "id": "19308441" }, { "contents": "Jo Ann Sayers\n\n\nstudent production and invited her to Hollywood for a screen test. She was offered a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her first credited film role was in 1938. In 1940, she was selected for the titular role in the Broadway production of \"My Sister Eileen\", opposite Shirley Booth, who was two decades Sayers' senior, which opened on December 26, 1940. She remained in the Broadway cast until June 1942, when she left to marry Anthony A. Bliss (1913-1991), a New", "id": "6389492" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nstar Baby Rosalie Essex (June Preisser), but Mickey gets in a fight with Jeff. Mickey tells Judge Black that his parents' show flopped. The judge gives Mickey 30 days to pay damages. Don and Molly sing \"Where or When\" with an orchestra of children. Mickey has a date with Baby and dines in her house. Mickey wants Baby in the show, which needs $287. She offers to pay it. Mickey smokes a cigar and leaves sick. Mickey tells Patsy that Baby has to play", "id": "9219785" }, { "contents": "Chela Ruiz\n\n\nChela Ruiz (5 June 1921 - 1 December 1999) was an Argentine actress. Her career spanned radio, film, television and stage, and in 1997 the Argentine Association of Actors awarded her the prestigious Premio Podestá for her theatrical work. Ruiz made her professional debut on Radio Splendid, along with her sister Nora Cullen, working as an actress and reader. In the 1940s and 1950s she was known for her narration of radio plays by Nené Cascallar. She began appearing on stage in 1942. A film career followed later", "id": "10450238" }, { "contents": "Petula Clark\n\n\nher film career in the late 1960s, starring in two big musical films. In \"Finian's Rainbow\" (1968), she starred opposite Fred Astaire and she was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for her performance. With her role, she again made history by becoming Astaire's final on-screen dance partner. The following year she was cast with Peter O'Toole in \"Goodbye, Mr. Chips\" (1969), a musical adaptation of the classic James Hilton novella", "id": "19868394" }, { "contents": "Sara Haden\n\n\n\". Haden later became a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract player in the late 1930s and had smallish roles in many of the studio's films, most notably in the Andy Hardy series starring Mickey Rooney, cast as the spinsterish Aunt Milly Forrest. Haden made her last film, \"Andy Hardy Comes Home\", in 1958, but was active on television until a 1965 guest spot on \"Dr. Kildare\". She was most notable for her stern, humorless characterisations such as a truant officer in Shirley Temple's \"", "id": "16961173" }, { "contents": "Rafaela Ottiano\n\n\n's last film was the musical comedy \"I Married an Angel\" (1942), starring Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. During her career in film, she appeared in approximately 45 motion pictures, opposite such actors as Barbara Stanwyck, Conrad Nagel, Peter Lorre, Zasu Pitts, and Katharine Hepburn. Ottiano lived in the Times Square area during the Prohibition Era and never married. She died in 1942, in the Boston home of her late parents, of intestinal cancer at the age of 54. She is buried at", "id": "9444719" }, { "contents": "Doris Davenport\n\n\nDoris Davenport, also known as Doris Jordan (January 1, 1917 – June 18, 1980) was an American film actress during the 1930s and early 1940s. Davenport was born in Moline, Illinois, but raised in Hollywood, California. She started auditioning for acting roles, and performed in her first film in 1934, titled \"Kid Millions\". From 1934 to 1939, she appeared in only five films, supporting herself by working in New York City as a fashion model between films. However, when she auditioned", "id": "2801211" }, { "contents": "Patricia Dane\n\n\nPatricia Dane (born Thelma Pearl Pippins, August 4, 1919 – June 5, 1995) was an American film actress of the 1940s. Dane was born Thelma Pearl Pippins in Blountstown, Florida and was also known as Thelma Byrnes after her stepfather. She began her career designing clothes for a New York City dress firm and was signed to an MGM contract in 1941. Dane's earliest appearances were two uncredited roles in \"Ziegfeld Girl\" and \"I'll Wait for You\" (both 1941). She played the", "id": "18013995" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\na young girl. Her new contract called for a starting salary of $75 a week and scales up to $1000 a week for the seventh year. In November 1935, Parker purchased a new home in Beverly Hills, California. The following year she joined the ballet school of Dave Gould at MGM, along with Maureen O'Sullivan. By the fall of 1936, Parker was studying singing. She played Marian Hardy in the extremely popular Andy Hardy film series in the late 1930s and early 1940s. She was in the original", "id": "18919251" }, { "contents": "Rooney Mara\n\n\nwas always afraid that I might fail.\" Her first and only role in high school was Juliet in \"Romeo and Juliet\", which she got after being signed up to audition by a friend. Mara acted in a few student films while at NYU, and then began her career in acting, first auditioning at the age of nineteen. Mara first appeared as an extra in films which starred her sister, including a bit-part in the 2005 direct-to-video horror film \"\". She found work", "id": "18311311" }, { "contents": "Georgiana Young\n\n\nBelzer and Gladys Royal. Along with her half-sisters, she was raised Roman Catholic. Young's acting career was short-lived, though she appeared in three films. Her debut role was as Berta Hubbard, sister of Mabel Gardiner Hubbard, in Irving Cummings's 1939 biographical film \"The Story of Alexander Graham Bell\", opposite her sisters Loretta (as Mabel), Sally, and Polly Ann. She would later have bit parts in two other films: \"No, No, Nanette\" (1940)", "id": "6269969" }, { "contents": "Glikeriya Bogdanova-Chesnokova\n\n\nmedals for her service. Following the war, in 1946, Bogdanova-Chesnokova returned to the Leningrad State Theatre of Musical Comedy. In 1947, she received the Stalin Prize. In the mid 1950s, Bogdanova-Chesnokova performed during three circus seasons with the clown, The act involved acrobatic actions. In 1955, Bogdanova-Chesnokova made her first significant film appearance. She played Maria Mikhailovna in the comedy film \"Tamer of Tigers\". Generally, Bogdanova-Chesnokova was a character actress taking supporting roles. However, in", "id": "5458931" }, { "contents": "Judi West\n\n\nJudi West (born December 15, 1942) is an American actress, best known for her supporting role opposite Jack Lemmon in the 1966 comedy film \"The Fortune Cookie. Judi West acted in a few films in the 1960s and also appeared in television in the 1960s through the early 1980s. Her notable film appearances include: She had earlier worked on the Broadway stage including \"A Family Affair\" (1962) and \"She Loves Me\" (1963-1964). Married from 1971 to 1989 to actor John Rubinstein", "id": "5957659" }, { "contents": "Judy Holliday\n\n\nJudy Holliday (born Judith Tuvim, June 21, 1921 – June 7, 1965) was an American actress, comedian, and singer. She began her career as part of a nightclub act before working in Broadway plays and musicals. Her success in the 1946 stage production of \"Born Yesterday\" as Billie Dawn led to her being cast in the 1950 film version for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. She appeared in several films", "id": "15453399" }, { "contents": "Elena Lucena\n\n\nMaría Elena Lucena Arcuri (25 September 1914 – 7 October 2015) was an Argentine film actress of the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema (1940–60). She began her career in radio in the 1930s and reached her greatest success with the role of \"Chimbela\", which was later depicted in film, theater and television. Her extensive film career includes approximately 50 films, including notable performances in \"Chimbela\" (1939) and \"Una noche cualquiera\" (1951). During the 1940s she participated in films with comedians", "id": "16119436" }, { "contents": "Florence Nash\n\n\nLynch in \"Within the Law\". She was a noted theater actor and comedian in vaudeville until the 1930s (appearing in sketches including \"In 1999\"), when she moved to Hollywood to try her luck with films. Her most notable role was as \"Nancy Blake\" in the 1939 MGM blockbuster \"The Women\". She also was the author of a book of verse, \"June Dusk\", published in 1918. After her retirement from acting in 1939, she spent the next decade living comfortably in", "id": "6401074" }, { "contents": "Doris Nolan\n\n\nher jitters, the show was a success and Nolan got positive reviews. When Nolan left the play, Woods sent her back to Hollywood, getting her a contract with Universal Pictures. She continued to move back and forth between movies and theater throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Her most prominent film appearance was in the 1938 version of \"Holiday\", where she played alongside Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Her subsequent film roles went downhill, but she reinvigorated her Broadway career with an 18-month stint in \"The Doughgirls\",", "id": "14779965" }, { "contents": "Marjorie Stapp\n\n\nMarjorie Stapp (September 17, 1921 – June 2, 2014), was an American actress who was mainly in low-budget pictures. Stapp began her film career when she signed a contract with the film studio 20th Century-Fox in the 1940s. Her first screen appearance was in \"The Kid from Brooklyn\", a 1946 film starring Danny Kaye. This was followed by another minor appearance in \"Linda, Be Good\" (1947). Eventually, she landed a leading role in the Western movie \"The", "id": "3140505" }, { "contents": "Roshini (actress)\n\n\nRoshini is an Indian film actress who has worked in the Telugu and Tamil film industries. She is the younger sister actress Jyothika and half sister to Nagma. After getting a recommendation by her sister Nagma, Roshini made her acting debut in Selva's comedy film \"Sishya\", where she played the lead role alongside Karthik. She subsequently starred in \"Master\" (1997), opposite Chiranjeevi. Roshini was keen to accept performance-orientated roles and turned down several offers in late 1997 to be a part of films in", "id": "12724581" }, { "contents": "Lola Albright\n\n\nmotion picture debut with a small singing role in the 1947 musical comedy \"The Unfinished Dance\" and then appeared the following year in two Judy Garland movies: \"The Pirate\" and \"Easter Parade\". She first gained studio and public notice in the 1949 film noir production \"Champion\" with her portrayal of the wife of a manipulative boxing manager; she falls for a prizefighter played by Kirk Douglas. For the next several years, she appeared in secondary roles in over 20 films, including several B westerns. Among", "id": "18089616" }, { "contents": "Marika Rökk\n\n\nthe 1930s and 1940s. She had the technical skill and glamour to carry off the formulaic plots and dialogue and provide German audiences with a home grown star to rival the popular American actresses. \"Der Bettelstudent\" and \"Gasparone\", followed by \"Hello Janine!\" in 1939, all starred her together with Johannes Heesters and established them as the \"dream couple\" of the musical comedy genre. In her appearances she cultivated her \"magyar\" accent conveying a notion of \"paprika\" exoticism. Her films, which", "id": "9061566" }, { "contents": "Fay Wray\n\n\nShe continued to star in various films, including \"The Richest Girl in the World\", a second film with Joel McCrea, but by the early 1940s, her appearances became less frequent. She retired from acting in 1942 after her second marriage but due to financial exigencies soon resumed her acting career, and over the next three decades, Wray appeared in several films and also frequently on television. Wray was cast in the 1953-54 ABC situation comedy \"The Pride of the Family\" as Catherine Morrison. Paul Hartman", "id": "10781506" }, { "contents": "Margaret O'Brien\n\n\n(1944), opposite Judy Garland. As Tootie Smith, the feisty but fragile little sister of Judy Garland, she was a bright point in a very good film, especially in her musical numbers with Garland and during a Halloween sequence in which she confronts a grouchy neighbor. For her performance, she was awarded a special juvenile Oscar in 1944. Margaret and June Allyson were known as \"The Town Criers\" of MGM. \"We were always in competition: I wanted to cry better than June, and June wanted", "id": "7504217" }, { "contents": "Ann Sothern\n\n\nSothern appeared in two musical films in 1948, \"April Showers\" opposite Jack Carson and \"Words and Music\" starring an all-star cast of MGM actors, singers and dancers. In 1949, she appeared in the Academy Award-winning film \"A Letter to Three Wives\" for 20th Century Fox. Sothern received excellent reviews for her performance but the acclaim failed to stimulate her career, which had begun to wane in the late 1940s. In 1949, Sothern contracted hepatitis which she would battle for the next three", "id": "2026182" }, { "contents": "Jane Isbell\n\n\nWar soldier who once saved the life of Andrew Jackson. Clark Isbell's father was also a cousin of Alabama Governor William J. Samford. The Isbells moved to Los Angeles when Jane was an infant. The elder of two sisters, she began modeling and appearing as an extra in films when only four years old. In 1932, she made her first Mickey McGuire comedy starring Mickey Rooney and would eventually make five films in the Mickey McGuire series, similar to the Our Gang films. She grew up with child stars for playmates", "id": "12640286" }, { "contents": "Shirley Palmer (actress)\n\n\n1930 she appeared with Dorothy Sebastian and Neil Hamilton in \"Ladies Must Play\", her only film of that year. In 1932 she appeared in \"This Sporting Age\", and in 1933 she starred in probably her most recognizable role, starring opposite John Wayne in \"Somewhere in Sonora\". It would be her last credited role. She had two uncredited roles following that film, one the same year and the other in 1934, after which her career ended. She married once, to writer John Collier, and", "id": "3797930" }, { "contents": "Betty Grable\n\n\n(1930), starring Eddie Cantor. Although she received no on-screen credit for her performance, she led the film's opening musical number, entitled \"Cowboys\". In 1932, she signed a contract with RKO Radio Pictures, and she was assigned to a succession of acting, singing, and dancing classes at the studio's drama school. Her first film for the studio, \"Probation\" (1932), provided the 14-year-old Grable with her first credited screen role. Over the next few years", "id": "17559458" }, { "contents": "Erika Jayne\n\n\n, and pink.\" Soon after she gave birth to a son, Thomas Zizzo, Jr. After the couple divorced a few years later, she relocated to Los Angeles to pursue her dream of becoming a singer and performer. Early in her career, Girardi worked as a waitress to support herself between acting jobs. Girardi began her acting career in the early 1990s by appearing in small roles in several American television series and films. Her first on-screen appearance was a role as Suzanne Morton in the episode \"Prescription for", "id": "22006264" }, { "contents": "Thelma Scott\n\n\nThelma Scott (17 June 1913 – 23 November 2006) was an Australian character actress and television director whose 70-year career in theatre, radio, film and Australian television made her one of her country's most recognizable and beloved personalities. Having started her career in the early 1930s in theatre and film productions, she became one of the nation's biggest radio performers, during the 1940s featuring in productions such as \"Big Sister\" and \"Blue Hills\". She returned to made for TV films in the early late 1950s and", "id": "7852633" } ]
June Preisser ( June 26 , 1920 -- September 19 , 1984 ) was an American actress , briefly popular in musical films during the late 1930s and early 1940s , many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat . Born in New Orleans , Louisiana , Preisser was one of six children , and was an underweight baby . Her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age , in an attempt to build her strength . There she , and her sister Cherry , learnt acrobatics . Their mother was keen to have them follow a career in showbusiness , especially when their father died suddenly , leaving the family with few options to make a living . When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home , and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville , and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936 . The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States , and also performed in Europe , most notably for . Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage , and June was signed to a film contract by . Her first film Dancing Co-Ed ( 1939 ) provided only a small part , but her next film , Babes in Arms ( 1939 ) , gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland . She performed with Rooney and Garland again in [START_ENT] Strike Up the Band [END_ENT] ( 1940 ) , and with Rooney in two " Andy Hardy " films , Judge Hardy and Son ( 1939 ) and Andy Hardy 's Private Secretary ( 1941 ) . Gallant Sons ( 1940 ) placed her in a comedic murder mystery , and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in ( 1941 ) , and followed this with Sweater Girl ( 1942 ) , opposite Eddie Bracken . She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry , and the birth of a son , Ricky . By this time , MGM had little interest in promoting her , and she left to work for Monogram Pictures . She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years , and played the character " Dodie Rogers " in seven " high school " comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948 . Her final film was ( 1948 ) , and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of Annie Get Your Gun
d592da90-7868-4ac2-9ff2-2234e16ee646_June_Preisse:7
[{"answer": "Strike Up the Band (film)", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "20847232", "title": "Strike Up the Band (film)"}]}]
[ { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n, and June was signed to a film contract by MGM. Her first film, \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), provided only a small part, but her next film, \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. She performed with Rooney and Garland again in \"Strike Up the Band\" (1940), and with Rooney in two \"Andy Hardy\" films, \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939) and \"Andy Hardy", "id": "17067760" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nJune Preisser (June 26, 1920 – September 19, 1984) was an American actress, popular in musical films during the late 1930s and through the 1940s, many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat. Born in New Orleans, Preisser was one of six children. An underweight child, her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age, in an attempt to build her strength. There she, and her sister Cherry, learned acrobatics. Their mother was keen to have them follow a career", "id": "17067758" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n's Private Secretary\" (1941). \"Gallant Sons\" (1940) placed her in a comedic murder mystery, and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in \"Henry Aldrich for President\" (1941), and followed this with \"Sweater Girl\" (1942), opposite Eddie Bracken. She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry, and the birth of a son, Ricky. By this time, MGM had little interest in promoting her, and she left to work", "id": "17067761" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nfor Monogram Pictures. She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years, and played the character \"Dodie Rogers\" in seven \"high school\" comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948. Her final film was Music Man (1948), and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of \"Annie Get Your Gun\", she retired from acting. She divorced not long after, and taught dancing and acrobatics in Los Angeles, before moving with her son to Florida. They", "id": "17067762" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nin show business, especially when their father died suddenly, leaving the family with few options to make a living. When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home, and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville, and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936. The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States, and also performed in Europe, most notably for George VI of the United Kingdom. Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage", "id": "17067759" }, { "contents": "Melody Trail\n\n\nand Prejudice\" (1940). In 1939, she played the role of Carreen O'Hara, the sister of Scarlet O'Hara, in the film \"Gone with the Wind\". From 1937 to 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. She retired from films in 1950. Rutherford died on June 11, 2012 at her home in Beverly Hills, California. \"Melody Trail\" was filmed August 21–27, 1935. The film had an operating budget of $15,075", "id": "2111015" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nHardy Family movies as a literal girl-next-door to Rooney's character Andy Hardy, in \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938), although Hardy's love interest was played by Lana Turner. They teamed as lead characters for the first time in \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), ultimately appearing in five additional films, including Hardy films \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\" (1940) and \"Life Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland stated that she, Rooney, and other young", "id": "13593082" }, { "contents": "Annie Get Your Gun (film)\n\n\n, MGM's biggest musical comedy star, was originally cast as Annie Oakley. She recorded all her songs for the soundtrack and worked for two months under the direction of Busby Berkeley and dance director Robert Alton. Berkeley and Garland had worked together previously in the late 1930s and early 1940s in a successful series of backstage musicals teaming her with fellow juvenile star Mickey Rooney. Berkeley had been fired from the Garland/Rooney musical \"Girl Crazy\" in 1943 due to personality clashes with musical director Roger Edens and for driving Garland very", "id": "13779025" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nYear for her live recording \"Judy at Carnegie Hall\" (1961). Garland began performing in vaudeville as a child with her two older sisters, and was later signed to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a teenager. Although she appeared in more than two dozen films with MGM and received acclaim for many different roles, she is often best remembered for her portrayal of Dorothy Gale in \"The Wizard of Oz\" (1939). Garland was a frequent on-screen partner of both Mickey Rooney and Gene Kelly,", "id": "13593062" }, { "contents": "Louise LaPlanche\n\n\n, portraying a gypsy girl in \"The Hunchback of Notre Dame\" in 1923. Both LaPlanche began competing in California beauty pageants. In 1939, Louise LaPlanche was crowned Miss Catalina. Her Miss Catalina win led to a film contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). She appeared in the 1940 MGM musical film, \"Strike Up the Band\", which starred Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. LaPlanche later left MGM and signed on to Paramount Studios. She was cast in several Paramount films, including 1942's", "id": "3022959" }, { "contents": "Bonita Granville\n\n\nfilm success led to Granville reprising the role in three sequels from 1938 to 1939, including \"Nancy Drew... Reporter\" (1939). As a young adult, she was once again cast in supporting roles, often in prestigious films such as \"Now, Voyager\" (1942), as well as two Andy Hardy films with Mickey Rooney, \"Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble\" (1944) and \"Love Laughs at Andy Hardy\" (1946). She is also remembered for her starring role in the World", "id": "12873960" }, { "contents": "Eve Arden\n\n\nThis was followed by roles in the crime film \"The Forgotten Woman\" (1939), and the comedy \"At the Circus\" (1939), opposite Groucho Marx, a role that would require her to perform acrobatics. In 1940, she appeared opposite Clark Gable in \"Comrade X\", followed by the drama \"Manpower\" (1941), opposite Marlene Dietrich. She also appeared in a supporting part in the Red Skelton comedy \"Whistling in the Dark\" (1941), and the romantic comedy \"", "id": "10321268" }, { "contents": "Shirley Temple\n\n\nher departure from Twentieth Century-Fox, Shirley was signed by MGM for her comeback; the studio made plans to team her with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney for the Andy Hardy series. The idea was quickly abandoned. The next idea was teaming her with Garland and Rooney for the musical \"Babes on Broadway\". Fearing that either of the latter two could easily upstage Temple, MGM replaced her with Virginia Weidler. As a result, her only film for Metro was \"Kathleen\" in 1941, a story about an", "id": "7504264" }, { "contents": "Barbara Read\n\n\ncompany. When she failed to receive any roles because of her lack of experience, she joined the Laguna Beach Players theater, where she acted in a new play each month for two years. Her first film appearance was one of the three principal girls in the 1936 comedy film \"Three Smart Girls\", which also starred Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. From 1937 through 1939, Read appeared in nine films, most notably starring in \"The Spellbinder\", opposite Lee Tracy. From 1940 through 1948, she appeared in", "id": "5406875" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy\n\n\nLife Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland's character, Betsy Booth, is an aspiring singer and she sings in the first two of these films. However, although Garland songs were planned for the final film, they were eventually dropped. Unlike Garland-Rooney films outside of the \"Andy Hardy\" series, Rooney's Hardy character is not a musician, so Garland and Rooney do not perform together in the Hardy films. Rooney played the character continuously from age 16 to 25, when he appeared in", "id": "7714497" }, { "contents": "Fay Holden\n\n\nthe depression era. Eventually they left Vancouver and moved to Hollywood. Holden appeared in 46 motion pictures between 1935 and 1958, but is best known for her recurring role as Emily Hardy, mother of Mickey Rooney's character in the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" film series. The series was enormously popular in the late 1930s and early '40s, and Holden was in 15 of the 16 Hardy movies, surpassed only by Rooney, who was in all 16. Holden is also remembered for her performance as Hazel, the mother", "id": "15552902" }, { "contents": "Margaret Early\n\n\nBrent, Bette Davis, and Fay Bainter. She later became a freelance actress and found herself working in various roles at such studios as RKO, Warner Bros., and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her other screen roles include parts in \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939), \"Strike Up The Band\" (1940), \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" (1941), and \"Stage Door Canteen\" (1943). She made her last screen appearance in \"Cinderella Jones\" (1946)", "id": "11267109" }, { "contents": "Sheila Darcy\n\n\n1935 her career had taken off, and from then until 1941 she had roles in 41 films. In most of her early films, she played the heroine in B-movies, often Westerns. Darcy's best known roles were as the female lead in cliffhangers, such as the 1939 film \"Zorro's Fighting Legion\", in which she performed opposite Reed Hadley. She also played the Dragon Lady in the serial \"Terry and the Pirates\", released in 1940. In Westerns, she often played opposite popular cowboy", "id": "21067295" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nIn 1937, Rooney made his first film alongside Judy Garland with \"Thoroughbreds Don't Cry\". Garland and Rooney became close friends as they co-starred in future films and became a successful song-and-dance team. Audiences delighted in seeing the \"playful interactions between the two stars showcase a wonderful chemistry\". Along with three of the \"Andy Hardy\" films, where she portrayed a girl attracted to Andy, they appeared together in a string of successful musicals, including \"Babes in Arms\" (1939", "id": "5690267" }, { "contents": "Brenda Marshall\n\n\nArdis Ankerson (September 29, 1915 – July 30, 1992), known as Brenda Marshall, was a Filipino-born, American film actress. Marshall made her first film appearance in the 1939 \"Espionage Agent\". The following year, she played the leading lady to Errol Flynn in \"The Sea Hawk\". After divorcing actor Richard Gaines in 1940, she married William Holden in 1941, and her own career soon slowed. She starred opposite James Cagney in \"Captains of the Clouds\" (1942).", "id": "14392731" }, { "contents": "Julie Haydon\n\n\nmade by MGM. In 1932, she signed with RKO, and her first major role came that year in \"The Conquerors\", directed by William Wellman Her most notable performance came in 1935's \"The Scoundrel\" playing opposite Noël Coward, but, despite a new contract with MGM, only a few more films were to come in her short career, including \"A Family Affair\" (1937), the initial movie in the Andy Hardy series. Some have held that it was Haydon and not Fay Wray who", "id": "19690260" }, { "contents": "Jean Darling\n\n\nAssociation. She turned down an offer to appear alongside Mickey Rooney in one of the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" movies, and went on Broadway, making her debut in the musical \"Count Me In\" in 1942. Darling's stage career hit a real high when she landed the role of Carrie Pipperidge in the original Broadway production of \"Carousel\" in 1945. She appeared in 850 consecutive performances. Her role as Carrie Pipperidge helped her with parts for radio and TV in the 1950s. She hosted her own television show", "id": "1616169" }, { "contents": "List of Lana Turner performances\n\n\nLana Turner was an American actress who appeared in over fifty films during her career, which spanned four decades. Discovered in 1937 at age 16, she signed a contract with Warner Bros. and appeared in several films for the studio before signing a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The studio's co-founder, Louis B. Mayer, helped further her career by casting her in several youth-oriented comedies and musicals, including \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941),", "id": "7891475" }, { "contents": "Marguerite Chapman\n\n\ncontract to Warner Brothers in 1941, and then with Columbia from 1942 to 1948. She made her film debut in 1940, working for the next two years in small roles. In 1942, her big break came with Republic Pictures when she was cast in the leading female role in the twelve-part adventure film serial \"Spy Smasher\", a production that has been ranked among the best serials ever made. Chapman soon began receiving more leading roles and appeared opposite important stars such as Edward G. Robinson and George Sanders.", "id": "2722471" }, { "contents": "Jeanne Cagney\n\n\nRKO Pictures. However, she signed a long-term contract with Paramount Pictures. She appeared in 19 films between 1939 and 1965, including four films with her brother James: \"Yankee Doodle Dandy\" (1942), \"The Time of Your Life\" (1948), \"A Lion Is in the Streets\" (1953), and \"Man of a Thousand Faces\" (1957). Cagney gave a noted performance opposite Mickey Rooney in the film noir crime film \"Quicksand\" (1950). Cagney", "id": "6954933" }, { "contents": "Little Annie Rooney (1925 film)\n\n\nLittle Annie Rooney is a 1925 American silent comedy-drama film starring Mary Pickford and directed by William Beaudine. Pickford, one of the most successful actresses of the silent era, was best known throughout her career for her iconic portrayals of penniless young girls. After generating only modest box office revenue playing adults in her previous two films, Pickford wrote and produced \"Little Annie Rooney\" to cater to silent film audiences. Though she was 33 years old, Pickford played the title role, an Irish girl living in the slums", "id": "236551" }, { "contents": "Edith Barrett\n\n\n, she married leading man Vincent Price in 1938. The marriage ended in 1948. She and Price had one son, author/poet and environmental activist Vincent Barrett Price (born 1940). Her biggest Broadway success was as star of the now-obscure production \"Mrs. Moonlight\". In her first film, \"Ladies in Retirement\" (1941), she played one of the two half-witted half-sisters of Ida Lupino's homicidal character. Her best remembered movie role is possibly Mrs. Holland's mother-", "id": "18853813" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\nHardy film, \"A Family Affair\", in 1937. Mickey Rooney played Andy Hardy in the series, supported by Lewis Stone, Ann Rutherford, and Fay Holden. The movies were directed by George B. Seitz. Parker's character, Marion, appeared in most of the films, and her romances were a recurring feature of the series. Though she and the character she played were absent from the last two Andy Hardy films of the 1940s, Parker came out of retirement to play Marian Hardy in one more movie,", "id": "18919252" }, { "contents": "Nancy Walker\n\n\nrole provided Walker with her film debut when she signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to make a movie version, starring Lucille Ball (filmed in 1943). In 1943, she also appeared with Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in the second film version of \"Girl Crazy\". Her next film, \"Broadway Rhythm\", in which she had a featured musical number backed by Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra, \"Milkman, Keep Those Bottles Quiet\", ended Walker's contract with Metro. Her dry comic", "id": "9657966" }, { "contents": "List of Gloria Stuart performances\n\n\nstarred in two films opposite Shirley Temple: \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936), and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938), both for 20th Century Fox. She subsequently co-starred in \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939) opposite Don Ameche. Dissatisfied with her career in film, Stuart shifted her focus to stage acting. Between 1940 and 1942, Stuart appeared in numerous summer stock plays in New England, including a 1940 production of \"Our Town\" in which she starred alongside its playwright", "id": "19503931" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nBabes in Arms is the 1939 American film version of the 1937 Broadway musical of the same name. The film version stars Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland, and features Charles Winninger, Guy Kibbee, June Preisser, Grace Hayes, and Betty Jaynes. The film concerns a group of youngsters trying to put on a show to prove their vaudevillian parents wrong and make it to Broadway. The original Broadway script was significantly revamped, restructured, and rewritten to accommodate Hollywood's needs. In 1921, vaudeville performer Joe Moran (Winninger)", "id": "9219782" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nhim when he transferred to MGM in 1938. Turner attracted attention by playing the role of a murder victim in her first film, LeRoy's \"They Won't Forget\" (1937), and she later transitioned into featured roles, often appearing as an ingénue. During the early 1940s, Turner established herself as a leading actress and one of MGM's top performers, appearing in such films as the film noir \"Johnny Eager\" (1941); the musical \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941); the horror film", "id": "11929991" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nthe stature of most leading men. He appeared in a number of films, including \"Words and Music\" in 1948, which paired him for the last time with Garland on film (he appeared with her on one episode as a guest on \"The Judy Garland Show\"). He briefly starred in a CBS radio series, \"Shorty Bell\", in the summer of 1948, and reprised his role as \"Andy Hardy\", with most of the original cast, in a syndicated radio version of \"The", "id": "5690276" }, { "contents": "Donna Reed\n\n\nmany starlets at MGM, she played Mickey Rooney's love interest in an Andy Hardy film, in her case the hugely popular \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942). She was second billed in a children's film, \"Mokey\" (1942). Reed played a love interest in \"Calling Dr. Gillespie\" (1942) and \"Apache Trail\" (1942), then did a thriller with Edward Arnold, \"Eyes in the Night\" (1942), directed by Fred Zinnemann. Reed had", "id": "13840841" }, { "contents": "Evalyn Knapp\n\n\nHis Private Secretary\", a light comedy in which Wayne portrays a suit-and-tie wearing playboy determined to win her over. She also appeared in \"Corruption\" that year opposite Preston Foster. One of her better known film roles was opposite Ken Maynard in the 1934 film \"In Old Santa Fe\" featuring Gene Autry in his first screen appearance, in which he sang with a bluegrass band. She worked through 1941, but her career slowed afterward. In 1943, she played her last role, uncredited,", "id": "560741" }, { "contents": "Kathryn Grayson\n\n\nexercise. Within a year, Grayson had her first screen test. However, the studio executives were not satisfied, and she went through a further six months of lessons until she made her first film appearance in 1941's \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" as the character's secretary Kathryn Land. In the film, she takes part in three musical numbers. Two further films were planned for Grayson in 1941; \"White House Girl\", which was later made in 1948 with Durbin, and \"Very Warm for May", "id": "20045432" }, { "contents": "Susi Nicoletti\n\n\nSusi Nicoletti (3 September 1918 – 5 June 2005) was a Bavarian-born actress best remembered today for over 100 supporting roles mostly in comedy films. She was born as Susanne Emilie Luise Adele Habersack in Munich, but spent most of her childhood with her parents in Amsterdam. Back in Munich, she made her stage debut at age 13. Two years later she became a ballerina. In the early 1930s she turned to cabaret. In 1939, she was offered her first film role. In 1940 she moved to", "id": "6091110" }, { "contents": "Dorothy Morris\n\n\nShe did a screen test for the female lead in \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942), but lost to Donna Reed. Appearing in bit parts in several of the studio's more successful films, Morris was signed to a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract in 1941. For one of her early film roles, \"Cry 'Havoc'\" (1943), she affected a British accent. Her next picture was the well-received drama \"The Human Comedy\", which featured a star cast,", "id": "323808" }, { "contents": "The Courtship of Andy Hardy\n\n\nThe Courtship of Andy Hardy is a 1942 film, part of the Andy Hardy series. It gave an early role to Donna Reed although Mickey Rooney had lobbied for his then-wife Ava Gardner to have her part. Within a few months of the film's release, she filed for divorce. This was the 12th entry in the long-running \"Andy Hardy\" series of sixteen. When Carvel teenager and new tow truck-owner Andy Hardy is stopped by a policeman for driving without a license plate, a radio", "id": "20736523" }, { "contents": "Mae Busch\n\n\nMae Busch (18 June 1891 – 20 April 1946) was an Australian-born actress who worked in both silent and sound films in early Hollywood. In the latter part of her career she appeared in many Laurel and Hardy comedies, where she frequently played Hardy's shrewish wife. Mae Busch was born Annie May Busch in Melbourne, Victoria to popular Australian vaudeville performers Elizabeth Maria Lay and Frederick William Busch. Her mother had been active since 1883 under the stage names \"Dora Devere\" and then \"Dora Busch\";", "id": "10830566" }, { "contents": "Hannelore Schroth\n\n\ndebut at the age of nine in 1931's Max Ophüls' comedy \"Dann schon lieber Lebertran\" opposite her mother. Until age sixteen she attended drama school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Her early film successes include \"Spiel im Sommerwind\" (1938), \"Weisser Flieder\" (1939) and \"Kitty und die Weltkonferenz\" (1939) - the latter of which was her first leading role. During World War II, Hannelore Schroth continued performing in films. Unlike her father, Heinrich Schroth, who was by", "id": "16153872" }, { "contents": "Lupe Vélez\n\n\npopular actress, RKO Pictures did not renew her contract in 1934. Over the next few years, Vélez worked for various studio as a freelance actress; she also spent two years in England where she filmed \"The Morals of Marcus\" and \"Gypsy Melody\" (both 1936). She returned to Los Angeles the following year where she appeared in the final part of the Wheeler & Woolsey comedy \"High Flyers\" (1937). Vélez made her final appearance on Broadway in the 1938 musical \"You Never Know\"", "id": "20716058" }, { "contents": "Katharine Kavanaugh\n\n\nher biggest claims to fame was helping to create the Jones Family characters, who would appear in 17 low-budget films between 1936 and 1940. The first film in the series, \"Every Saturday Night\", was released in 1936, and Kavanaugh would also co-write \"Educating Father\", released later that same year. While her screenwriting career cooled in the late 1930s, she continued writing plays that were produced in the Los Angeles area until her death in 1942. She and her husband, Oliver Ziegfeld (", "id": "21036559" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\n, including \"The Wizard of Oz\" and \"Babes in Arms\". She was the fourth person to receive the award as well as only one of twelve in history to ever be presented with one. Garland starred in three films released in 1940: \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\", \"Strike Up the Band\", and \"Little Nellie Kelly\". In the last, she played her first adult role, a dual role of both mother and daughter. \"Little Nellie Kelly\" was purchased from George M.", "id": "13593089" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nliving on her own. In late 1949 Hardi and her husband moved to Jakarta. Two years later she made her feature film debut in a bit role in the Produksi Film Negara (PFN; State Film Corporation)'s \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". The following year she took a starring role in another PFN film, \"Si Pintjang\", portraying an old woman; as she was only twenty-four, she was artificially aged with make-up. That same year she appeared as the lead love interest in", "id": "15623084" }, { "contents": "Jane Frazee\n\n\nB film \"Melody and Moonlight\" (1940) for Republic Pictures. Shortly after the film's release she was signed by Universal Pictures and was featured in \"Buck Privates\", the high-grossing 1941 comedy/World War II film starring Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The strong impression she made in that film elevated her to leading-lady roles in Universal's popular \"B\" musicals, usually appearing opposite Robert Paige. She left Universal in late 1942, when she married actor-director Glenn Tryon, who", "id": "11708629" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\n\n\nAndy Hardy Meets Debutante is a 1940 American romantic comedy film directed by George B. Seitz. The film stars Lewis Stone, Mickey Rooney, Cecilia Parker, Fay Holden and Judy Garland. It is the ninth of the \"Andy Hardy\" full-length film series. Andy Hardy (Mickey Rooney) from Carvel becomes infatuated with a well-known young socialite, Daphne Fowler (Diana Lewis), from New York City. Even though he hasn’t met the woman in person, he drops her name to his friends and", "id": "11382757" }, { "contents": "Martha Vickers\n\n\nplayed minor roles in several films during the early 1940s, working first at Universal Studios and then at RKO Pictures. She next went to Warner Bros., where \"they gave her the star push, rearranging her surname to 'Vickers.'\" Her work there included the role of Carmen Sternwood, the promiscuous, drug-addicted younger sister of Lauren Bacall's character in \"The Big Sleep\" (1946). She also starred in a musical, \"The Time, the Place and the Girl\", followed by", "id": "721594" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nwas over, she was summoned back to work and ultimately performed two songs as a guest in the Rodgers and Hart biopic \"Words and Music\" (1948), which was her last appearance with Mickey Rooney. Despite the all-star cast, \"Words and Music\" barely broke even at the box office. Having regained her strength, as well as some needed weight during her suspension, Garland felt much better and in the fall of 1948, she returned to MGM to replace a pregnant June Allyson for the musical", "id": "13593101" }, { "contents": "Martha O'Driscoll\n\n\n's Dangerous\" (1937), she was not credited by name. In the Deanna Durbin vehicle \"Mad About Music\" (1937), she was billed as \"pretty girl.\" Her face appeared on such advertisements as Charm-Kurl Supreme Cold Wave and Max Factor Hollywood Face Powder. Universal lent O'Driscoll to MGM for parts in \"The Secret of Dr Kildare\" (1939) and \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1940), starring Mickey Rooney. RKO, however, gave O'Driscoll her first two starring", "id": "20196774" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nMarlia Hardi (also Marlia Hardy; 10 March 192718 June 1984) was an Indonesian film actress active from 1951 to 1983. Born in the Central Javan city of Magelang, she took to the stage in the 1940s before moving to Jakarta in 1949. Two years later she made her feature film debut in \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". Over the next two decades she appeared in over seventy films, became recognized for her depictions of mothers, and received the Citra Award for Best Supporting Actress. Despite her productiveness, however", "id": "15623082" }, { "contents": "Susan Peters\n\n\nLos Angeles. After completing filming of the comedy \"Andy Hardy's Double Life\" (1942) in which she had a lead role, Mervyn LeRoy cast Peters in the drama \"Random Harvest\", in which she portrayed a young woman who falls in love with her step-uncle. The film was one of the top 25 highest-earning films of the year, and Peters's performance garnered her critical acclaim, earning her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. The success of \"Random Harvest\" led", "id": "17519590" }, { "contents": "Paulette Goddard\n\n\nshe appeared as an uncredited extra in two films, the Laurel and Hardy short film \"Berth Marks\" (1929), and George Fitzmaurice's drama \"The Locked Door\" (1929). Following her divorce, she briefly visited Europe before returning to Hollywood in late 1930 with her mother. Her second attempt at acting was no more successful than the first, as she landed work only as an extra. In 1930, she signed her first film contract with producer Samuel Goldwyn to appear as a Goldwyn Girl in \"", "id": "3980436" }, { "contents": "Trixie Friganza\n\n\nTrixie Friganza (born Delia O'Callaghan; November 29, 1870 – February 27, 1955) began her career as an operetta soubrette, working her way from the chorus to starring in musical comedies to having her own feature act on the vaudeville circuit. She transitioned to film in the early 1920s mostly playing small characters that were quirky and comedic and retired from the stage in 1940 due to health concerns. She spent her last years teaching drama to young women in a convent school and when she died she left everything to the convent", "id": "13928014" }, { "contents": "Susan Hayward\n\n\nSusan Hayward (born Edythe Marrenner; June 30, 1917 – March 14, 1975) was an American actress and model. After working as a fashion model, Hayward traveled to Hollywood in 1937. She secured a film contract and played several small supporting roles over the next few years. By the late 1940s, the quality of her film roles had improved, and she achieved recognition for her dramatic abilities with the first of five Academy Award nominations for Best Actress for her performance as an alcoholic in \"Smash-Up,", "id": "14143916" }, { "contents": "Nella Walker\n\n\nyear to 1938, she had 23 film appearances. Her biggest film appearance during this period was in \"Young Dr. Kildare\" with Lionel Barrymore and Lew Ayres. Throughout the 1930s, her career was strong, and despite never being a premier star, she repeatedly had solid acting roles. She finished the decade strongly in 1939 with nine film roles, only three of which were uncredited. The 1940s mirrored her success of the previous decade in many ways, with appearances in 37 films from 1940 to 1947. Later in her", "id": "4686869" }, { "contents": "May Wallace\n\n\nMay Wallace (August 23, 1877 – December 11, 1938) was an American film actress. She appeared in 63 films between 1914 and 1939. Wallace was born in Russiaville, Indiana and died in Los Angeles, California, where she worked in Hollywood as a film actress. She often played supporting roles for producer Hal Roach in his Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang comedies, mostly in maternal roles. Wallace was married to Thomas W. Maddox until her death, they had one daughter and one son. She died of", "id": "9169980" }, { "contents": "Ora Carew\n\n\na film editor. Ora's birth year has been listed as 1893, on her death certificate and is also what her grave says, but Utah birth index and the 1900 census indicate 1891. She was educated by private tutors and at Roland Hall Seminary. After her father died on June 19, 1896, her mother moved with her three children to California. Her screen career began with MGM, following numerous engagements in vaudeville, musical comedy and stock. Some of her most notable films with MGM were \"Go West,", "id": "19207733" }, { "contents": "Eilene Janssen\n\n\nMary Eilene Janssen (born May 25, 1938), is a retired American film and television actress. Eilene Janssen was born in Los Angeles, California on May 25, 1938, to parents Henry Janssen and Mary Ellen Thompson. She began her film career as a child actress in the early 1940s. With her father being a longtime worker for Universal Studios, Eilene Janssen made her first screen appearance in the 1940 film \"Sandy Gets Her Man\". She continued to have bit parts in several movies such as \"Two", "id": "12362318" }, { "contents": "Ann Rutherford\n\n\nLouis Mayer originally refused the loan because he considered the role too minor, but Rutherford passionately appealed to him to change his mind. In December 1939, while promoting the new movie, Rutherford visited six Confederate Army veterans at the Confederate Soldiers Home near Atlanta. One of the veterans gave Rutherford a rose corsage tied with Confederate colors. From 1937 until 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. Her first film in this series was \"You're Only Young Once\"", "id": "6472820" }, { "contents": "Gloria Stuart\n\n\nMan\" (1933), followed by roles in the Shirley Temple musicals \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936) and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938). She also starred as Queen Anne in the musical comedy \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939). Beginning in 1940, Stuart slowed her film career, instead performing in regional theater in New England. In 1945, following a tenure as a contract player for Twentieth Century Fox, Stuart abandoned her acting career and shifted to a career as an artist", "id": "3454792" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nand Judy Garland in the Andy Hardy film \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938). During the shoot, Turner completed her studies with an educational social worker, allowing her to graduate high school that year. The film was a box-office success, and her appearance in it as a flirtatious high school student convinced studio head Louis B. Mayer that Turner could be the next Jean Harlow, a sex symbol who had died six months before Turner's arrival at MGM. Mayer helped further Turner's career by giving her", "id": "11930007" }, { "contents": "Linda Darnell\n\n\nLinda Darnell (born Monetta Eloyse Darnell, October 16, 1923April 10, 1965) was an American film actress. Darnell progressed from modeling as a child to acting in theater and film. At the encouragement of her mother, she made her first film in 1939, and appeared in supporting roles in big-budget films for 20th Century Fox throughout the 1940s. She rose to fame with co-starring roles opposite Tyrone Power in adventure films, and established a main character career after her role in \"Forever Amber\" (", "id": "9752181" }, { "contents": "Marcia Mae Jones\n\n\nsigned her to co-star with Jackie Moran in a few rustic romances; when this series lapsed, both Jones and Moran joined Monogram's popular action-comedy series starring Frankie Darro. As a young adult, she continued to work in motion pictures, notably in \"Nine Girls\" (1944) and \"Arson, Inc.\" (1948). Like many familiar faces of the 1940s, she appeared on numerous television programs. In 1951 she appeared as comic foil to Buster Keaton in Keaton's filmed TV series.", "id": "5963847" }, { "contents": "Peggy Drake\n\n\nPeggy Drake (6 October 1922 – 19 September 2014), was an Austrian film and television actress. She primarily appeared in B-movies of the 1940s. Born Lieselotte Mayer in Vienna, Austria, she moved to the United States with her family at the age of three. Her acting career started with an uncredited role in the film \"Too Many Girls\" (1940). Her career was short-lived, appearing in five films between 1940 and 1942, most notably in the serial film \"King of the", "id": "8901594" }, { "contents": "Signe Hasso\n\n\nfilm in Sweden. In 1933, she made her first film, \"Tystnadens hus\", with German film director/cameraman Harry Hasso, whom she married the same year. They had a son by the time she was 19. They divorced in 1941. In 1940, she moved to the United States, where she signed a contract with RKO Pictures, who promoted her as \"the next Garbo\". With few RKO roles forthcoming, she turned to the stage to make a living. According to the Internet Broadway", "id": "19347089" }, { "contents": "Rita La Roy\n\n\nand the \"cobra dance\" in which her feet and legs were tied together under a stylized snakeskin so that she danced by undulating her torso.\" In 1929, she made her film debut in \"The Delightful Rogue\", starring opposite matinee idol Rod La Rocque. Over the next several years, working as part of the RKO Radio Pictures stable, she appeared in both starring and supporting roles. While her final significant role was in the 1940 comedy-mystery \"Hold That Woman!\", she had several small", "id": "13534727" }, { "contents": "Elizabeth Taylor\n\n\nto socially prominent American parents, Taylor moved with her family to Los Angeles in 1939. She made her acting debut in a minor role in the Universal Pictures film \"There's One Born Every Minute\" (1942) but the studio ended her contract after a year. She was then signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and became a popular teen star after appearing in \"National Velvet\" (1944). She transitioned to more mature roles in the 1950s, when she starred in the comedy \"Father of the", "id": "19979789" }, { "contents": "Karin Booth\n\n\nKarin Booth (born June Francis Hoffman, June 19, 1916 – July 27, 2003) was an American film and TV actress of the 1940s to 1960s. She was born June Francis Hoffman on June 19, 1916, in Minneapolis, Minnesota to Francis T. and Ebba V. Hoffman. She lived in Portland and Los Angeles, attending John Marshall High School. She began her career modeling and being a chorus girl in 1939 and was signed under contract to Paramount Pictures in 1941 under the name Katharine Booth. After changing her", "id": "1386964" }, { "contents": "Saranya Ponvannan\n\n\ndebut in Mani Ratnam's production \"Nayakan,\" as the female lead opposite Kamal Haasan in 1987. She made her first Telugu appearance in 1988 film \"Neerajanam;\" her Malayalam debut was a year later in the 1989 film \"Artham\" starring opposite Mamooty. In 1996 almost during the end of her career as a lead actress she debuted in Kannada cinema in \"Appaji\". After marriage in 1995, she semi retired from acting. In 2000 she appeared playing the lead role in the comedy television series, \"", "id": "2557700" }, { "contents": "Franciska Gaal\n\n\n\", opposite Fredric March. She followed this with the comedy \"The Girl Downstairs\" (1938) with Franchot Tone, a remake of her Austrian success \"Catherine the Last\". In 1939, Gaal co-starred with Bing Crosby in the musical \"Paris Honeymoon\". She returned to Hungary in 1940 because of her mother's illness and remained there for the duration of World War II. In 1946, she began work on a new film in Budapest the Soviet-backed \"Renee XIV\" but filming was", "id": "19308441" }, { "contents": "Jo Ann Sayers\n\n\nstudent production and invited her to Hollywood for a screen test. She was offered a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her first credited film role was in 1938. In 1940, she was selected for the titular role in the Broadway production of \"My Sister Eileen\", opposite Shirley Booth, who was two decades Sayers' senior, which opened on December 26, 1940. She remained in the Broadway cast until June 1942, when she left to marry Anthony A. Bliss (1913-1991), a New", "id": "6389492" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nstar Baby Rosalie Essex (June Preisser), but Mickey gets in a fight with Jeff. Mickey tells Judge Black that his parents' show flopped. The judge gives Mickey 30 days to pay damages. Don and Molly sing \"Where or When\" with an orchestra of children. Mickey has a date with Baby and dines in her house. Mickey wants Baby in the show, which needs $287. She offers to pay it. Mickey smokes a cigar and leaves sick. Mickey tells Patsy that Baby has to play", "id": "9219785" }, { "contents": "Chela Ruiz\n\n\nChela Ruiz (5 June 1921 - 1 December 1999) was an Argentine actress. Her career spanned radio, film, television and stage, and in 1997 the Argentine Association of Actors awarded her the prestigious Premio Podestá for her theatrical work. Ruiz made her professional debut on Radio Splendid, along with her sister Nora Cullen, working as an actress and reader. In the 1940s and 1950s she was known for her narration of radio plays by Nené Cascallar. She began appearing on stage in 1942. A film career followed later", "id": "10450238" }, { "contents": "Petula Clark\n\n\nher film career in the late 1960s, starring in two big musical films. In \"Finian's Rainbow\" (1968), she starred opposite Fred Astaire and she was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for her performance. With her role, she again made history by becoming Astaire's final on-screen dance partner. The following year she was cast with Peter O'Toole in \"Goodbye, Mr. Chips\" (1969), a musical adaptation of the classic James Hilton novella", "id": "19868394" }, { "contents": "Sara Haden\n\n\n\". Haden later became a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract player in the late 1930s and had smallish roles in many of the studio's films, most notably in the Andy Hardy series starring Mickey Rooney, cast as the spinsterish Aunt Milly Forrest. Haden made her last film, \"Andy Hardy Comes Home\", in 1958, but was active on television until a 1965 guest spot on \"Dr. Kildare\". She was most notable for her stern, humorless characterisations such as a truant officer in Shirley Temple's \"", "id": "16961173" }, { "contents": "Rafaela Ottiano\n\n\n's last film was the musical comedy \"I Married an Angel\" (1942), starring Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. During her career in film, she appeared in approximately 45 motion pictures, opposite such actors as Barbara Stanwyck, Conrad Nagel, Peter Lorre, Zasu Pitts, and Katharine Hepburn. Ottiano lived in the Times Square area during the Prohibition Era and never married. She died in 1942, in the Boston home of her late parents, of intestinal cancer at the age of 54. She is buried at", "id": "9444719" }, { "contents": "Doris Davenport\n\n\nDoris Davenport, also known as Doris Jordan (January 1, 1917 – June 18, 1980) was an American film actress during the 1930s and early 1940s. Davenport was born in Moline, Illinois, but raised in Hollywood, California. She started auditioning for acting roles, and performed in her first film in 1934, titled \"Kid Millions\". From 1934 to 1939, she appeared in only five films, supporting herself by working in New York City as a fashion model between films. However, when she auditioned", "id": "2801211" }, { "contents": "Patricia Dane\n\n\nPatricia Dane (born Thelma Pearl Pippins, August 4, 1919 – June 5, 1995) was an American film actress of the 1940s. Dane was born Thelma Pearl Pippins in Blountstown, Florida and was also known as Thelma Byrnes after her stepfather. She began her career designing clothes for a New York City dress firm and was signed to an MGM contract in 1941. Dane's earliest appearances were two uncredited roles in \"Ziegfeld Girl\" and \"I'll Wait for You\" (both 1941). She played the", "id": "18013995" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\na young girl. Her new contract called for a starting salary of $75 a week and scales up to $1000 a week for the seventh year. In November 1935, Parker purchased a new home in Beverly Hills, California. The following year she joined the ballet school of Dave Gould at MGM, along with Maureen O'Sullivan. By the fall of 1936, Parker was studying singing. She played Marian Hardy in the extremely popular Andy Hardy film series in the late 1930s and early 1940s. She was in the original", "id": "18919251" }, { "contents": "Rooney Mara\n\n\nwas always afraid that I might fail.\" Her first and only role in high school was Juliet in \"Romeo and Juliet\", which she got after being signed up to audition by a friend. Mara acted in a few student films while at NYU, and then began her career in acting, first auditioning at the age of nineteen. Mara first appeared as an extra in films which starred her sister, including a bit-part in the 2005 direct-to-video horror film \"\". She found work", "id": "18311311" }, { "contents": "Georgiana Young\n\n\nBelzer and Gladys Royal. Along with her half-sisters, she was raised Roman Catholic. Young's acting career was short-lived, though she appeared in three films. Her debut role was as Berta Hubbard, sister of Mabel Gardiner Hubbard, in Irving Cummings's 1939 biographical film \"The Story of Alexander Graham Bell\", opposite her sisters Loretta (as Mabel), Sally, and Polly Ann. She would later have bit parts in two other films: \"No, No, Nanette\" (1940)", "id": "6269969" }, { "contents": "Glikeriya Bogdanova-Chesnokova\n\n\nmedals for her service. Following the war, in 1946, Bogdanova-Chesnokova returned to the Leningrad State Theatre of Musical Comedy. In 1947, she received the Stalin Prize. In the mid 1950s, Bogdanova-Chesnokova performed during three circus seasons with the clown, The act involved acrobatic actions. In 1955, Bogdanova-Chesnokova made her first significant film appearance. She played Maria Mikhailovna in the comedy film \"Tamer of Tigers\". Generally, Bogdanova-Chesnokova was a character actress taking supporting roles. However, in", "id": "5458931" }, { "contents": "Judi West\n\n\nJudi West (born December 15, 1942) is an American actress, best known for her supporting role opposite Jack Lemmon in the 1966 comedy film \"The Fortune Cookie. Judi West acted in a few films in the 1960s and also appeared in television in the 1960s through the early 1980s. Her notable film appearances include: She had earlier worked on the Broadway stage including \"A Family Affair\" (1962) and \"She Loves Me\" (1963-1964). Married from 1971 to 1989 to actor John Rubinstein", "id": "5957659" }, { "contents": "Judy Holliday\n\n\nJudy Holliday (born Judith Tuvim, June 21, 1921 – June 7, 1965) was an American actress, comedian, and singer. She began her career as part of a nightclub act before working in Broadway plays and musicals. Her success in the 1946 stage production of \"Born Yesterday\" as Billie Dawn led to her being cast in the 1950 film version for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. She appeared in several films", "id": "15453399" }, { "contents": "Elena Lucena\n\n\nMaría Elena Lucena Arcuri (25 September 1914 – 7 October 2015) was an Argentine film actress of the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema (1940–60). She began her career in radio in the 1930s and reached her greatest success with the role of \"Chimbela\", which was later depicted in film, theater and television. Her extensive film career includes approximately 50 films, including notable performances in \"Chimbela\" (1939) and \"Una noche cualquiera\" (1951). During the 1940s she participated in films with comedians", "id": "16119436" }, { "contents": "Florence Nash\n\n\nLynch in \"Within the Law\". She was a noted theater actor and comedian in vaudeville until the 1930s (appearing in sketches including \"In 1999\"), when she moved to Hollywood to try her luck with films. Her most notable role was as \"Nancy Blake\" in the 1939 MGM blockbuster \"The Women\". She also was the author of a book of verse, \"June Dusk\", published in 1918. After her retirement from acting in 1939, she spent the next decade living comfortably in", "id": "6401074" }, { "contents": "Doris Nolan\n\n\nher jitters, the show was a success and Nolan got positive reviews. When Nolan left the play, Woods sent her back to Hollywood, getting her a contract with Universal Pictures. She continued to move back and forth between movies and theater throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Her most prominent film appearance was in the 1938 version of \"Holiday\", where she played alongside Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Her subsequent film roles went downhill, but she reinvigorated her Broadway career with an 18-month stint in \"The Doughgirls\",", "id": "14779965" }, { "contents": "Marjorie Stapp\n\n\nMarjorie Stapp (September 17, 1921 – June 2, 2014), was an American actress who was mainly in low-budget pictures. Stapp began her film career when she signed a contract with the film studio 20th Century-Fox in the 1940s. Her first screen appearance was in \"The Kid from Brooklyn\", a 1946 film starring Danny Kaye. This was followed by another minor appearance in \"Linda, Be Good\" (1947). Eventually, she landed a leading role in the Western movie \"The", "id": "3140505" }, { "contents": "Roshini (actress)\n\n\nRoshini is an Indian film actress who has worked in the Telugu and Tamil film industries. She is the younger sister actress Jyothika and half sister to Nagma. After getting a recommendation by her sister Nagma, Roshini made her acting debut in Selva's comedy film \"Sishya\", where she played the lead role alongside Karthik. She subsequently starred in \"Master\" (1997), opposite Chiranjeevi. Roshini was keen to accept performance-orientated roles and turned down several offers in late 1997 to be a part of films in", "id": "12724581" }, { "contents": "Lola Albright\n\n\nmotion picture debut with a small singing role in the 1947 musical comedy \"The Unfinished Dance\" and then appeared the following year in two Judy Garland movies: \"The Pirate\" and \"Easter Parade\". She first gained studio and public notice in the 1949 film noir production \"Champion\" with her portrayal of the wife of a manipulative boxing manager; she falls for a prizefighter played by Kirk Douglas. For the next several years, she appeared in secondary roles in over 20 films, including several B westerns. Among", "id": "18089616" }, { "contents": "Marika Rökk\n\n\nthe 1930s and 1940s. She had the technical skill and glamour to carry off the formulaic plots and dialogue and provide German audiences with a home grown star to rival the popular American actresses. \"Der Bettelstudent\" and \"Gasparone\", followed by \"Hello Janine!\" in 1939, all starred her together with Johannes Heesters and established them as the \"dream couple\" of the musical comedy genre. In her appearances she cultivated her \"magyar\" accent conveying a notion of \"paprika\" exoticism. Her films, which", "id": "9061566" }, { "contents": "Fay Wray\n\n\nShe continued to star in various films, including \"The Richest Girl in the World\", a second film with Joel McCrea, but by the early 1940s, her appearances became less frequent. She retired from acting in 1942 after her second marriage but due to financial exigencies soon resumed her acting career, and over the next three decades, Wray appeared in several films and also frequently on television. Wray was cast in the 1953-54 ABC situation comedy \"The Pride of the Family\" as Catherine Morrison. Paul Hartman", "id": "10781506" }, { "contents": "Margaret O'Brien\n\n\n(1944), opposite Judy Garland. As Tootie Smith, the feisty but fragile little sister of Judy Garland, she was a bright point in a very good film, especially in her musical numbers with Garland and during a Halloween sequence in which she confronts a grouchy neighbor. For her performance, she was awarded a special juvenile Oscar in 1944. Margaret and June Allyson were known as \"The Town Criers\" of MGM. \"We were always in competition: I wanted to cry better than June, and June wanted", "id": "7504217" }, { "contents": "Ann Sothern\n\n\nSothern appeared in two musical films in 1948, \"April Showers\" opposite Jack Carson and \"Words and Music\" starring an all-star cast of MGM actors, singers and dancers. In 1949, she appeared in the Academy Award-winning film \"A Letter to Three Wives\" for 20th Century Fox. Sothern received excellent reviews for her performance but the acclaim failed to stimulate her career, which had begun to wane in the late 1940s. In 1949, Sothern contracted hepatitis which she would battle for the next three", "id": "2026182" }, { "contents": "Jane Isbell\n\n\nWar soldier who once saved the life of Andrew Jackson. Clark Isbell's father was also a cousin of Alabama Governor William J. Samford. The Isbells moved to Los Angeles when Jane was an infant. The elder of two sisters, she began modeling and appearing as an extra in films when only four years old. In 1932, she made her first Mickey McGuire comedy starring Mickey Rooney and would eventually make five films in the Mickey McGuire series, similar to the Our Gang films. She grew up with child stars for playmates", "id": "12640286" }, { "contents": "Shirley Palmer (actress)\n\n\n1930 she appeared with Dorothy Sebastian and Neil Hamilton in \"Ladies Must Play\", her only film of that year. In 1932 she appeared in \"This Sporting Age\", and in 1933 she starred in probably her most recognizable role, starring opposite John Wayne in \"Somewhere in Sonora\". It would be her last credited role. She had two uncredited roles following that film, one the same year and the other in 1934, after which her career ended. She married once, to writer John Collier, and", "id": "3797930" }, { "contents": "Betty Grable\n\n\n(1930), starring Eddie Cantor. Although she received no on-screen credit for her performance, she led the film's opening musical number, entitled \"Cowboys\". In 1932, she signed a contract with RKO Radio Pictures, and she was assigned to a succession of acting, singing, and dancing classes at the studio's drama school. Her first film for the studio, \"Probation\" (1932), provided the 14-year-old Grable with her first credited screen role. Over the next few years", "id": "17559458" }, { "contents": "Erika Jayne\n\n\n, and pink.\" Soon after she gave birth to a son, Thomas Zizzo, Jr. After the couple divorced a few years later, she relocated to Los Angeles to pursue her dream of becoming a singer and performer. Early in her career, Girardi worked as a waitress to support herself between acting jobs. Girardi began her acting career in the early 1990s by appearing in small roles in several American television series and films. Her first on-screen appearance was a role as Suzanne Morton in the episode \"Prescription for", "id": "22006264" }, { "contents": "Thelma Scott\n\n\nThelma Scott (17 June 1913 – 23 November 2006) was an Australian character actress and television director whose 70-year career in theatre, radio, film and Australian television made her one of her country's most recognizable and beloved personalities. Having started her career in the early 1930s in theatre and film productions, she became one of the nation's biggest radio performers, during the 1940s featuring in productions such as \"Big Sister\" and \"Blue Hills\". She returned to made for TV films in the early late 1950s and", "id": "7852633" } ]
June Preisser ( June 26 , 1920 -- September 19 , 1984 ) was an American actress , briefly popular in musical films during the late 1930s and early 1940s , many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat . Born in New Orleans , Louisiana , Preisser was one of six children , and was an underweight baby . Her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age , in an attempt to build her strength . There she , and her sister Cherry , learnt acrobatics . Their mother was keen to have them follow a career in showbusiness , especially when their father died suddenly , leaving the family with few options to make a living . When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home , and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville , and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936 . The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States , and also performed in Europe , most notably for . Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage , and June was signed to a film contract by . Her first film Dancing Co-Ed ( 1939 ) provided only a small part , but her next film , Babes in Arms ( 1939 ) , gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland . She performed with Rooney and Garland again in Strike Up the Band ( 1940 ) , and with Rooney in two " Andy Hardy " films , Judge Hardy and Son ( 1939 ) and [START_ENT] Andy Hardy 's Private Secretary [END_ENT] ( 1941 ) . Gallant Sons ( 1940 ) placed her in a comedic murder mystery , and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in ( 1941 ) , and followed this with Sweater Girl ( 1942 ) , opposite Eddie Bracken . She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry , and the birth of a son , Ricky . By this time , MGM had little interest in promoting her , and she left to work for Monogram Pictures . She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years , and played the character " Dodie Rogers " in seven " high school " comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948 . Her final film was ( 1948 ) , and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of Annie Get Your Gun
94d084d7-5164-4020-b381-0d1816ef8ab3_June_Preisse:8
[{"answer": "Andy Hardy's Private Secretary", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "17617782", "title": "Andy Hardy's Private Secretary"}]}]
[ { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n, and June was signed to a film contract by MGM. Her first film, \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), provided only a small part, but her next film, \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. She performed with Rooney and Garland again in \"Strike Up the Band\" (1940), and with Rooney in two \"Andy Hardy\" films, \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939) and \"Andy Hardy", "id": "17067760" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nJune Preisser (June 26, 1920 – September 19, 1984) was an American actress, popular in musical films during the late 1930s and through the 1940s, many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat. Born in New Orleans, Preisser was one of six children. An underweight child, her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age, in an attempt to build her strength. There she, and her sister Cherry, learned acrobatics. Their mother was keen to have them follow a career", "id": "17067758" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n's Private Secretary\" (1941). \"Gallant Sons\" (1940) placed her in a comedic murder mystery, and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in \"Henry Aldrich for President\" (1941), and followed this with \"Sweater Girl\" (1942), opposite Eddie Bracken. She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry, and the birth of a son, Ricky. By this time, MGM had little interest in promoting her, and she left to work", "id": "17067761" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nfor Monogram Pictures. She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years, and played the character \"Dodie Rogers\" in seven \"high school\" comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948. Her final film was Music Man (1948), and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of \"Annie Get Your Gun\", she retired from acting. She divorced not long after, and taught dancing and acrobatics in Los Angeles, before moving with her son to Florida. They", "id": "17067762" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nin show business, especially when their father died suddenly, leaving the family with few options to make a living. When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home, and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville, and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936. The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States, and also performed in Europe, most notably for George VI of the United Kingdom. Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage", "id": "17067759" }, { "contents": "Melody Trail\n\n\nand Prejudice\" (1940). In 1939, she played the role of Carreen O'Hara, the sister of Scarlet O'Hara, in the film \"Gone with the Wind\". From 1937 to 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. She retired from films in 1950. Rutherford died on June 11, 2012 at her home in Beverly Hills, California. \"Melody Trail\" was filmed August 21–27, 1935. The film had an operating budget of $15,075", "id": "2111015" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nHardy Family movies as a literal girl-next-door to Rooney's character Andy Hardy, in \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938), although Hardy's love interest was played by Lana Turner. They teamed as lead characters for the first time in \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), ultimately appearing in five additional films, including Hardy films \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\" (1940) and \"Life Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland stated that she, Rooney, and other young", "id": "13593082" }, { "contents": "Annie Get Your Gun (film)\n\n\n, MGM's biggest musical comedy star, was originally cast as Annie Oakley. She recorded all her songs for the soundtrack and worked for two months under the direction of Busby Berkeley and dance director Robert Alton. Berkeley and Garland had worked together previously in the late 1930s and early 1940s in a successful series of backstage musicals teaming her with fellow juvenile star Mickey Rooney. Berkeley had been fired from the Garland/Rooney musical \"Girl Crazy\" in 1943 due to personality clashes with musical director Roger Edens and for driving Garland very", "id": "13779025" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nYear for her live recording \"Judy at Carnegie Hall\" (1961). Garland began performing in vaudeville as a child with her two older sisters, and was later signed to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a teenager. Although she appeared in more than two dozen films with MGM and received acclaim for many different roles, she is often best remembered for her portrayal of Dorothy Gale in \"The Wizard of Oz\" (1939). Garland was a frequent on-screen partner of both Mickey Rooney and Gene Kelly,", "id": "13593062" }, { "contents": "Louise LaPlanche\n\n\n, portraying a gypsy girl in \"The Hunchback of Notre Dame\" in 1923. Both LaPlanche began competing in California beauty pageants. In 1939, Louise LaPlanche was crowned Miss Catalina. Her Miss Catalina win led to a film contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). She appeared in the 1940 MGM musical film, \"Strike Up the Band\", which starred Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. LaPlanche later left MGM and signed on to Paramount Studios. She was cast in several Paramount films, including 1942's", "id": "3022959" }, { "contents": "Bonita Granville\n\n\nfilm success led to Granville reprising the role in three sequels from 1938 to 1939, including \"Nancy Drew... Reporter\" (1939). As a young adult, she was once again cast in supporting roles, often in prestigious films such as \"Now, Voyager\" (1942), as well as two Andy Hardy films with Mickey Rooney, \"Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble\" (1944) and \"Love Laughs at Andy Hardy\" (1946). She is also remembered for her starring role in the World", "id": "12873960" }, { "contents": "Eve Arden\n\n\nThis was followed by roles in the crime film \"The Forgotten Woman\" (1939), and the comedy \"At the Circus\" (1939), opposite Groucho Marx, a role that would require her to perform acrobatics. In 1940, she appeared opposite Clark Gable in \"Comrade X\", followed by the drama \"Manpower\" (1941), opposite Marlene Dietrich. She also appeared in a supporting part in the Red Skelton comedy \"Whistling in the Dark\" (1941), and the romantic comedy \"", "id": "10321268" }, { "contents": "Shirley Temple\n\n\nher departure from Twentieth Century-Fox, Shirley was signed by MGM for her comeback; the studio made plans to team her with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney for the Andy Hardy series. The idea was quickly abandoned. The next idea was teaming her with Garland and Rooney for the musical \"Babes on Broadway\". Fearing that either of the latter two could easily upstage Temple, MGM replaced her with Virginia Weidler. As a result, her only film for Metro was \"Kathleen\" in 1941, a story about an", "id": "7504264" }, { "contents": "Barbara Read\n\n\ncompany. When she failed to receive any roles because of her lack of experience, she joined the Laguna Beach Players theater, where she acted in a new play each month for two years. Her first film appearance was one of the three principal girls in the 1936 comedy film \"Three Smart Girls\", which also starred Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. From 1937 through 1939, Read appeared in nine films, most notably starring in \"The Spellbinder\", opposite Lee Tracy. From 1940 through 1948, she appeared in", "id": "5406875" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy\n\n\nLife Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland's character, Betsy Booth, is an aspiring singer and she sings in the first two of these films. However, although Garland songs were planned for the final film, they were eventually dropped. Unlike Garland-Rooney films outside of the \"Andy Hardy\" series, Rooney's Hardy character is not a musician, so Garland and Rooney do not perform together in the Hardy films. Rooney played the character continuously from age 16 to 25, when he appeared in", "id": "7714497" }, { "contents": "Fay Holden\n\n\nthe depression era. Eventually they left Vancouver and moved to Hollywood. Holden appeared in 46 motion pictures between 1935 and 1958, but is best known for her recurring role as Emily Hardy, mother of Mickey Rooney's character in the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" film series. The series was enormously popular in the late 1930s and early '40s, and Holden was in 15 of the 16 Hardy movies, surpassed only by Rooney, who was in all 16. Holden is also remembered for her performance as Hazel, the mother", "id": "15552902" }, { "contents": "Margaret Early\n\n\nBrent, Bette Davis, and Fay Bainter. She later became a freelance actress and found herself working in various roles at such studios as RKO, Warner Bros., and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her other screen roles include parts in \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939), \"Strike Up The Band\" (1940), \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" (1941), and \"Stage Door Canteen\" (1943). She made her last screen appearance in \"Cinderella Jones\" (1946)", "id": "11267109" }, { "contents": "Sheila Darcy\n\n\n1935 her career had taken off, and from then until 1941 she had roles in 41 films. In most of her early films, she played the heroine in B-movies, often Westerns. Darcy's best known roles were as the female lead in cliffhangers, such as the 1939 film \"Zorro's Fighting Legion\", in which she performed opposite Reed Hadley. She also played the Dragon Lady in the serial \"Terry and the Pirates\", released in 1940. In Westerns, she often played opposite popular cowboy", "id": "21067295" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nIn 1937, Rooney made his first film alongside Judy Garland with \"Thoroughbreds Don't Cry\". Garland and Rooney became close friends as they co-starred in future films and became a successful song-and-dance team. Audiences delighted in seeing the \"playful interactions between the two stars showcase a wonderful chemistry\". Along with three of the \"Andy Hardy\" films, where she portrayed a girl attracted to Andy, they appeared together in a string of successful musicals, including \"Babes in Arms\" (1939", "id": "5690267" }, { "contents": "Brenda Marshall\n\n\nArdis Ankerson (September 29, 1915 – July 30, 1992), known as Brenda Marshall, was a Filipino-born, American film actress. Marshall made her first film appearance in the 1939 \"Espionage Agent\". The following year, she played the leading lady to Errol Flynn in \"The Sea Hawk\". After divorcing actor Richard Gaines in 1940, she married William Holden in 1941, and her own career soon slowed. She starred opposite James Cagney in \"Captains of the Clouds\" (1942).", "id": "14392731" }, { "contents": "Julie Haydon\n\n\nmade by MGM. In 1932, she signed with RKO, and her first major role came that year in \"The Conquerors\", directed by William Wellman Her most notable performance came in 1935's \"The Scoundrel\" playing opposite Noël Coward, but, despite a new contract with MGM, only a few more films were to come in her short career, including \"A Family Affair\" (1937), the initial movie in the Andy Hardy series. Some have held that it was Haydon and not Fay Wray who", "id": "19690260" }, { "contents": "Jean Darling\n\n\nAssociation. She turned down an offer to appear alongside Mickey Rooney in one of the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" movies, and went on Broadway, making her debut in the musical \"Count Me In\" in 1942. Darling's stage career hit a real high when she landed the role of Carrie Pipperidge in the original Broadway production of \"Carousel\" in 1945. She appeared in 850 consecutive performances. Her role as Carrie Pipperidge helped her with parts for radio and TV in the 1950s. She hosted her own television show", "id": "1616169" }, { "contents": "List of Lana Turner performances\n\n\nLana Turner was an American actress who appeared in over fifty films during her career, which spanned four decades. Discovered in 1937 at age 16, she signed a contract with Warner Bros. and appeared in several films for the studio before signing a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The studio's co-founder, Louis B. Mayer, helped further her career by casting her in several youth-oriented comedies and musicals, including \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941),", "id": "7891475" }, { "contents": "Marguerite Chapman\n\n\ncontract to Warner Brothers in 1941, and then with Columbia from 1942 to 1948. She made her film debut in 1940, working for the next two years in small roles. In 1942, her big break came with Republic Pictures when she was cast in the leading female role in the twelve-part adventure film serial \"Spy Smasher\", a production that has been ranked among the best serials ever made. Chapman soon began receiving more leading roles and appeared opposite important stars such as Edward G. Robinson and George Sanders.", "id": "2722471" }, { "contents": "Jeanne Cagney\n\n\nRKO Pictures. However, she signed a long-term contract with Paramount Pictures. She appeared in 19 films between 1939 and 1965, including four films with her brother James: \"Yankee Doodle Dandy\" (1942), \"The Time of Your Life\" (1948), \"A Lion Is in the Streets\" (1953), and \"Man of a Thousand Faces\" (1957). Cagney gave a noted performance opposite Mickey Rooney in the film noir crime film \"Quicksand\" (1950). Cagney", "id": "6954933" }, { "contents": "Little Annie Rooney (1925 film)\n\n\nLittle Annie Rooney is a 1925 American silent comedy-drama film starring Mary Pickford and directed by William Beaudine. Pickford, one of the most successful actresses of the silent era, was best known throughout her career for her iconic portrayals of penniless young girls. After generating only modest box office revenue playing adults in her previous two films, Pickford wrote and produced \"Little Annie Rooney\" to cater to silent film audiences. Though she was 33 years old, Pickford played the title role, an Irish girl living in the slums", "id": "236551" }, { "contents": "Edith Barrett\n\n\n, she married leading man Vincent Price in 1938. The marriage ended in 1948. She and Price had one son, author/poet and environmental activist Vincent Barrett Price (born 1940). Her biggest Broadway success was as star of the now-obscure production \"Mrs. Moonlight\". In her first film, \"Ladies in Retirement\" (1941), she played one of the two half-witted half-sisters of Ida Lupino's homicidal character. Her best remembered movie role is possibly Mrs. Holland's mother-", "id": "18853813" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\nHardy film, \"A Family Affair\", in 1937. Mickey Rooney played Andy Hardy in the series, supported by Lewis Stone, Ann Rutherford, and Fay Holden. The movies were directed by George B. Seitz. Parker's character, Marion, appeared in most of the films, and her romances were a recurring feature of the series. Though she and the character she played were absent from the last two Andy Hardy films of the 1940s, Parker came out of retirement to play Marian Hardy in one more movie,", "id": "18919252" }, { "contents": "Nancy Walker\n\n\nrole provided Walker with her film debut when she signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to make a movie version, starring Lucille Ball (filmed in 1943). In 1943, she also appeared with Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in the second film version of \"Girl Crazy\". Her next film, \"Broadway Rhythm\", in which she had a featured musical number backed by Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra, \"Milkman, Keep Those Bottles Quiet\", ended Walker's contract with Metro. Her dry comic", "id": "9657966" }, { "contents": "List of Gloria Stuart performances\n\n\nstarred in two films opposite Shirley Temple: \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936), and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938), both for 20th Century Fox. She subsequently co-starred in \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939) opposite Don Ameche. Dissatisfied with her career in film, Stuart shifted her focus to stage acting. Between 1940 and 1942, Stuart appeared in numerous summer stock plays in New England, including a 1940 production of \"Our Town\" in which she starred alongside its playwright", "id": "19503931" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nBabes in Arms is the 1939 American film version of the 1937 Broadway musical of the same name. The film version stars Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland, and features Charles Winninger, Guy Kibbee, June Preisser, Grace Hayes, and Betty Jaynes. The film concerns a group of youngsters trying to put on a show to prove their vaudevillian parents wrong and make it to Broadway. The original Broadway script was significantly revamped, restructured, and rewritten to accommodate Hollywood's needs. In 1921, vaudeville performer Joe Moran (Winninger)", "id": "9219782" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nhim when he transferred to MGM in 1938. Turner attracted attention by playing the role of a murder victim in her first film, LeRoy's \"They Won't Forget\" (1937), and she later transitioned into featured roles, often appearing as an ingénue. During the early 1940s, Turner established herself as a leading actress and one of MGM's top performers, appearing in such films as the film noir \"Johnny Eager\" (1941); the musical \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941); the horror film", "id": "11929991" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nthe stature of most leading men. He appeared in a number of films, including \"Words and Music\" in 1948, which paired him for the last time with Garland on film (he appeared with her on one episode as a guest on \"The Judy Garland Show\"). He briefly starred in a CBS radio series, \"Shorty Bell\", in the summer of 1948, and reprised his role as \"Andy Hardy\", with most of the original cast, in a syndicated radio version of \"The", "id": "5690276" }, { "contents": "Donna Reed\n\n\nmany starlets at MGM, she played Mickey Rooney's love interest in an Andy Hardy film, in her case the hugely popular \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942). She was second billed in a children's film, \"Mokey\" (1942). Reed played a love interest in \"Calling Dr. Gillespie\" (1942) and \"Apache Trail\" (1942), then did a thriller with Edward Arnold, \"Eyes in the Night\" (1942), directed by Fred Zinnemann. Reed had", "id": "13840841" }, { "contents": "Evalyn Knapp\n\n\nHis Private Secretary\", a light comedy in which Wayne portrays a suit-and-tie wearing playboy determined to win her over. She also appeared in \"Corruption\" that year opposite Preston Foster. One of her better known film roles was opposite Ken Maynard in the 1934 film \"In Old Santa Fe\" featuring Gene Autry in his first screen appearance, in which he sang with a bluegrass band. She worked through 1941, but her career slowed afterward. In 1943, she played her last role, uncredited,", "id": "560741" }, { "contents": "Kathryn Grayson\n\n\nexercise. Within a year, Grayson had her first screen test. However, the studio executives were not satisfied, and she went through a further six months of lessons until she made her first film appearance in 1941's \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" as the character's secretary Kathryn Land. In the film, she takes part in three musical numbers. Two further films were planned for Grayson in 1941; \"White House Girl\", which was later made in 1948 with Durbin, and \"Very Warm for May", "id": "20045432" }, { "contents": "Susi Nicoletti\n\n\nSusi Nicoletti (3 September 1918 – 5 June 2005) was a Bavarian-born actress best remembered today for over 100 supporting roles mostly in comedy films. She was born as Susanne Emilie Luise Adele Habersack in Munich, but spent most of her childhood with her parents in Amsterdam. Back in Munich, she made her stage debut at age 13. Two years later she became a ballerina. In the early 1930s she turned to cabaret. In 1939, she was offered her first film role. In 1940 she moved to", "id": "6091110" }, { "contents": "Dorothy Morris\n\n\nShe did a screen test for the female lead in \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942), but lost to Donna Reed. Appearing in bit parts in several of the studio's more successful films, Morris was signed to a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract in 1941. For one of her early film roles, \"Cry 'Havoc'\" (1943), she affected a British accent. Her next picture was the well-received drama \"The Human Comedy\", which featured a star cast,", "id": "323808" }, { "contents": "The Courtship of Andy Hardy\n\n\nThe Courtship of Andy Hardy is a 1942 film, part of the Andy Hardy series. It gave an early role to Donna Reed although Mickey Rooney had lobbied for his then-wife Ava Gardner to have her part. Within a few months of the film's release, she filed for divorce. This was the 12th entry in the long-running \"Andy Hardy\" series of sixteen. When Carvel teenager and new tow truck-owner Andy Hardy is stopped by a policeman for driving without a license plate, a radio", "id": "20736523" }, { "contents": "Mae Busch\n\n\nMae Busch (18 June 1891 – 20 April 1946) was an Australian-born actress who worked in both silent and sound films in early Hollywood. In the latter part of her career she appeared in many Laurel and Hardy comedies, where she frequently played Hardy's shrewish wife. Mae Busch was born Annie May Busch in Melbourne, Victoria to popular Australian vaudeville performers Elizabeth Maria Lay and Frederick William Busch. Her mother had been active since 1883 under the stage names \"Dora Devere\" and then \"Dora Busch\";", "id": "10830566" }, { "contents": "Hannelore Schroth\n\n\ndebut at the age of nine in 1931's Max Ophüls' comedy \"Dann schon lieber Lebertran\" opposite her mother. Until age sixteen she attended drama school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Her early film successes include \"Spiel im Sommerwind\" (1938), \"Weisser Flieder\" (1939) and \"Kitty und die Weltkonferenz\" (1939) - the latter of which was her first leading role. During World War II, Hannelore Schroth continued performing in films. Unlike her father, Heinrich Schroth, who was by", "id": "16153872" }, { "contents": "Lupe Vélez\n\n\npopular actress, RKO Pictures did not renew her contract in 1934. Over the next few years, Vélez worked for various studio as a freelance actress; she also spent two years in England where she filmed \"The Morals of Marcus\" and \"Gypsy Melody\" (both 1936). She returned to Los Angeles the following year where she appeared in the final part of the Wheeler & Woolsey comedy \"High Flyers\" (1937). Vélez made her final appearance on Broadway in the 1938 musical \"You Never Know\"", "id": "20716058" }, { "contents": "Katharine Kavanaugh\n\n\nher biggest claims to fame was helping to create the Jones Family characters, who would appear in 17 low-budget films between 1936 and 1940. The first film in the series, \"Every Saturday Night\", was released in 1936, and Kavanaugh would also co-write \"Educating Father\", released later that same year. While her screenwriting career cooled in the late 1930s, she continued writing plays that were produced in the Los Angeles area until her death in 1942. She and her husband, Oliver Ziegfeld (", "id": "21036559" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\n, including \"The Wizard of Oz\" and \"Babes in Arms\". She was the fourth person to receive the award as well as only one of twelve in history to ever be presented with one. Garland starred in three films released in 1940: \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\", \"Strike Up the Band\", and \"Little Nellie Kelly\". In the last, she played her first adult role, a dual role of both mother and daughter. \"Little Nellie Kelly\" was purchased from George M.", "id": "13593089" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nliving on her own. In late 1949 Hardi and her husband moved to Jakarta. Two years later she made her feature film debut in a bit role in the Produksi Film Negara (PFN; State Film Corporation)'s \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". The following year she took a starring role in another PFN film, \"Si Pintjang\", portraying an old woman; as she was only twenty-four, she was artificially aged with make-up. That same year she appeared as the lead love interest in", "id": "15623084" }, { "contents": "Jane Frazee\n\n\nB film \"Melody and Moonlight\" (1940) for Republic Pictures. Shortly after the film's release she was signed by Universal Pictures and was featured in \"Buck Privates\", the high-grossing 1941 comedy/World War II film starring Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The strong impression she made in that film elevated her to leading-lady roles in Universal's popular \"B\" musicals, usually appearing opposite Robert Paige. She left Universal in late 1942, when she married actor-director Glenn Tryon, who", "id": "11708629" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\n\n\nAndy Hardy Meets Debutante is a 1940 American romantic comedy film directed by George B. Seitz. The film stars Lewis Stone, Mickey Rooney, Cecilia Parker, Fay Holden and Judy Garland. It is the ninth of the \"Andy Hardy\" full-length film series. Andy Hardy (Mickey Rooney) from Carvel becomes infatuated with a well-known young socialite, Daphne Fowler (Diana Lewis), from New York City. Even though he hasn’t met the woman in person, he drops her name to his friends and", "id": "11382757" }, { "contents": "Martha Vickers\n\n\nplayed minor roles in several films during the early 1940s, working first at Universal Studios and then at RKO Pictures. She next went to Warner Bros., where \"they gave her the star push, rearranging her surname to 'Vickers.'\" Her work there included the role of Carmen Sternwood, the promiscuous, drug-addicted younger sister of Lauren Bacall's character in \"The Big Sleep\" (1946). She also starred in a musical, \"The Time, the Place and the Girl\", followed by", "id": "721594" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nwas over, she was summoned back to work and ultimately performed two songs as a guest in the Rodgers and Hart biopic \"Words and Music\" (1948), which was her last appearance with Mickey Rooney. Despite the all-star cast, \"Words and Music\" barely broke even at the box office. Having regained her strength, as well as some needed weight during her suspension, Garland felt much better and in the fall of 1948, she returned to MGM to replace a pregnant June Allyson for the musical", "id": "13593101" }, { "contents": "Martha O'Driscoll\n\n\n's Dangerous\" (1937), she was not credited by name. In the Deanna Durbin vehicle \"Mad About Music\" (1937), she was billed as \"pretty girl.\" Her face appeared on such advertisements as Charm-Kurl Supreme Cold Wave and Max Factor Hollywood Face Powder. Universal lent O'Driscoll to MGM for parts in \"The Secret of Dr Kildare\" (1939) and \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1940), starring Mickey Rooney. RKO, however, gave O'Driscoll her first two starring", "id": "20196774" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nMarlia Hardi (also Marlia Hardy; 10 March 192718 June 1984) was an Indonesian film actress active from 1951 to 1983. Born in the Central Javan city of Magelang, she took to the stage in the 1940s before moving to Jakarta in 1949. Two years later she made her feature film debut in \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". Over the next two decades she appeared in over seventy films, became recognized for her depictions of mothers, and received the Citra Award for Best Supporting Actress. Despite her productiveness, however", "id": "15623082" }, { "contents": "Susan Peters\n\n\nLos Angeles. After completing filming of the comedy \"Andy Hardy's Double Life\" (1942) in which she had a lead role, Mervyn LeRoy cast Peters in the drama \"Random Harvest\", in which she portrayed a young woman who falls in love with her step-uncle. The film was one of the top 25 highest-earning films of the year, and Peters's performance garnered her critical acclaim, earning her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. The success of \"Random Harvest\" led", "id": "17519590" }, { "contents": "Paulette Goddard\n\n\nshe appeared as an uncredited extra in two films, the Laurel and Hardy short film \"Berth Marks\" (1929), and George Fitzmaurice's drama \"The Locked Door\" (1929). Following her divorce, she briefly visited Europe before returning to Hollywood in late 1930 with her mother. Her second attempt at acting was no more successful than the first, as she landed work only as an extra. In 1930, she signed her first film contract with producer Samuel Goldwyn to appear as a Goldwyn Girl in \"", "id": "3980436" }, { "contents": "Trixie Friganza\n\n\nTrixie Friganza (born Delia O'Callaghan; November 29, 1870 – February 27, 1955) began her career as an operetta soubrette, working her way from the chorus to starring in musical comedies to having her own feature act on the vaudeville circuit. She transitioned to film in the early 1920s mostly playing small characters that were quirky and comedic and retired from the stage in 1940 due to health concerns. She spent her last years teaching drama to young women in a convent school and when she died she left everything to the convent", "id": "13928014" }, { "contents": "Susan Hayward\n\n\nSusan Hayward (born Edythe Marrenner; June 30, 1917 – March 14, 1975) was an American actress and model. After working as a fashion model, Hayward traveled to Hollywood in 1937. She secured a film contract and played several small supporting roles over the next few years. By the late 1940s, the quality of her film roles had improved, and she achieved recognition for her dramatic abilities with the first of five Academy Award nominations for Best Actress for her performance as an alcoholic in \"Smash-Up,", "id": "14143916" }, { "contents": "Nella Walker\n\n\nyear to 1938, she had 23 film appearances. Her biggest film appearance during this period was in \"Young Dr. Kildare\" with Lionel Barrymore and Lew Ayres. Throughout the 1930s, her career was strong, and despite never being a premier star, she repeatedly had solid acting roles. She finished the decade strongly in 1939 with nine film roles, only three of which were uncredited. The 1940s mirrored her success of the previous decade in many ways, with appearances in 37 films from 1940 to 1947. Later in her", "id": "4686869" }, { "contents": "May Wallace\n\n\nMay Wallace (August 23, 1877 – December 11, 1938) was an American film actress. She appeared in 63 films between 1914 and 1939. Wallace was born in Russiaville, Indiana and died in Los Angeles, California, where she worked in Hollywood as a film actress. She often played supporting roles for producer Hal Roach in his Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang comedies, mostly in maternal roles. Wallace was married to Thomas W. Maddox until her death, they had one daughter and one son. She died of", "id": "9169980" }, { "contents": "Ora Carew\n\n\na film editor. Ora's birth year has been listed as 1893, on her death certificate and is also what her grave says, but Utah birth index and the 1900 census indicate 1891. She was educated by private tutors and at Roland Hall Seminary. After her father died on June 19, 1896, her mother moved with her three children to California. Her screen career began with MGM, following numerous engagements in vaudeville, musical comedy and stock. Some of her most notable films with MGM were \"Go West,", "id": "19207733" }, { "contents": "Eilene Janssen\n\n\nMary Eilene Janssen (born May 25, 1938), is a retired American film and television actress. Eilene Janssen was born in Los Angeles, California on May 25, 1938, to parents Henry Janssen and Mary Ellen Thompson. She began her film career as a child actress in the early 1940s. With her father being a longtime worker for Universal Studios, Eilene Janssen made her first screen appearance in the 1940 film \"Sandy Gets Her Man\". She continued to have bit parts in several movies such as \"Two", "id": "12362318" }, { "contents": "Ann Rutherford\n\n\nLouis Mayer originally refused the loan because he considered the role too minor, but Rutherford passionately appealed to him to change his mind. In December 1939, while promoting the new movie, Rutherford visited six Confederate Army veterans at the Confederate Soldiers Home near Atlanta. One of the veterans gave Rutherford a rose corsage tied with Confederate colors. From 1937 until 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. Her first film in this series was \"You're Only Young Once\"", "id": "6472820" }, { "contents": "Gloria Stuart\n\n\nMan\" (1933), followed by roles in the Shirley Temple musicals \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936) and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938). She also starred as Queen Anne in the musical comedy \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939). Beginning in 1940, Stuart slowed her film career, instead performing in regional theater in New England. In 1945, following a tenure as a contract player for Twentieth Century Fox, Stuart abandoned her acting career and shifted to a career as an artist", "id": "3454792" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nand Judy Garland in the Andy Hardy film \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938). During the shoot, Turner completed her studies with an educational social worker, allowing her to graduate high school that year. The film was a box-office success, and her appearance in it as a flirtatious high school student convinced studio head Louis B. Mayer that Turner could be the next Jean Harlow, a sex symbol who had died six months before Turner's arrival at MGM. Mayer helped further Turner's career by giving her", "id": "11930007" }, { "contents": "Linda Darnell\n\n\nLinda Darnell (born Monetta Eloyse Darnell, October 16, 1923April 10, 1965) was an American film actress. Darnell progressed from modeling as a child to acting in theater and film. At the encouragement of her mother, she made her first film in 1939, and appeared in supporting roles in big-budget films for 20th Century Fox throughout the 1940s. She rose to fame with co-starring roles opposite Tyrone Power in adventure films, and established a main character career after her role in \"Forever Amber\" (", "id": "9752181" }, { "contents": "Marcia Mae Jones\n\n\nsigned her to co-star with Jackie Moran in a few rustic romances; when this series lapsed, both Jones and Moran joined Monogram's popular action-comedy series starring Frankie Darro. As a young adult, she continued to work in motion pictures, notably in \"Nine Girls\" (1944) and \"Arson, Inc.\" (1948). Like many familiar faces of the 1940s, she appeared on numerous television programs. In 1951 she appeared as comic foil to Buster Keaton in Keaton's filmed TV series.", "id": "5963847" }, { "contents": "Peggy Drake\n\n\nPeggy Drake (6 October 1922 – 19 September 2014), was an Austrian film and television actress. She primarily appeared in B-movies of the 1940s. Born Lieselotte Mayer in Vienna, Austria, she moved to the United States with her family at the age of three. Her acting career started with an uncredited role in the film \"Too Many Girls\" (1940). Her career was short-lived, appearing in five films between 1940 and 1942, most notably in the serial film \"King of the", "id": "8901594" }, { "contents": "Signe Hasso\n\n\nfilm in Sweden. In 1933, she made her first film, \"Tystnadens hus\", with German film director/cameraman Harry Hasso, whom she married the same year. They had a son by the time she was 19. They divorced in 1941. In 1940, she moved to the United States, where she signed a contract with RKO Pictures, who promoted her as \"the next Garbo\". With few RKO roles forthcoming, she turned to the stage to make a living. According to the Internet Broadway", "id": "19347089" }, { "contents": "Rita La Roy\n\n\nand the \"cobra dance\" in which her feet and legs were tied together under a stylized snakeskin so that she danced by undulating her torso.\" In 1929, she made her film debut in \"The Delightful Rogue\", starring opposite matinee idol Rod La Rocque. Over the next several years, working as part of the RKO Radio Pictures stable, she appeared in both starring and supporting roles. While her final significant role was in the 1940 comedy-mystery \"Hold That Woman!\", she had several small", "id": "13534727" }, { "contents": "Elizabeth Taylor\n\n\nto socially prominent American parents, Taylor moved with her family to Los Angeles in 1939. She made her acting debut in a minor role in the Universal Pictures film \"There's One Born Every Minute\" (1942) but the studio ended her contract after a year. She was then signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and became a popular teen star after appearing in \"National Velvet\" (1944). She transitioned to more mature roles in the 1950s, when she starred in the comedy \"Father of the", "id": "19979789" }, { "contents": "Karin Booth\n\n\nKarin Booth (born June Francis Hoffman, June 19, 1916 – July 27, 2003) was an American film and TV actress of the 1940s to 1960s. She was born June Francis Hoffman on June 19, 1916, in Minneapolis, Minnesota to Francis T. and Ebba V. Hoffman. She lived in Portland and Los Angeles, attending John Marshall High School. She began her career modeling and being a chorus girl in 1939 and was signed under contract to Paramount Pictures in 1941 under the name Katharine Booth. After changing her", "id": "1386964" }, { "contents": "Saranya Ponvannan\n\n\ndebut in Mani Ratnam's production \"Nayakan,\" as the female lead opposite Kamal Haasan in 1987. She made her first Telugu appearance in 1988 film \"Neerajanam;\" her Malayalam debut was a year later in the 1989 film \"Artham\" starring opposite Mamooty. In 1996 almost during the end of her career as a lead actress she debuted in Kannada cinema in \"Appaji\". After marriage in 1995, she semi retired from acting. In 2000 she appeared playing the lead role in the comedy television series, \"", "id": "2557700" }, { "contents": "Franciska Gaal\n\n\n\", opposite Fredric March. She followed this with the comedy \"The Girl Downstairs\" (1938) with Franchot Tone, a remake of her Austrian success \"Catherine the Last\". In 1939, Gaal co-starred with Bing Crosby in the musical \"Paris Honeymoon\". She returned to Hungary in 1940 because of her mother's illness and remained there for the duration of World War II. In 1946, she began work on a new film in Budapest the Soviet-backed \"Renee XIV\" but filming was", "id": "19308441" }, { "contents": "Jo Ann Sayers\n\n\nstudent production and invited her to Hollywood for a screen test. She was offered a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her first credited film role was in 1938. In 1940, she was selected for the titular role in the Broadway production of \"My Sister Eileen\", opposite Shirley Booth, who was two decades Sayers' senior, which opened on December 26, 1940. She remained in the Broadway cast until June 1942, when she left to marry Anthony A. Bliss (1913-1991), a New", "id": "6389492" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nstar Baby Rosalie Essex (June Preisser), but Mickey gets in a fight with Jeff. Mickey tells Judge Black that his parents' show flopped. The judge gives Mickey 30 days to pay damages. Don and Molly sing \"Where or When\" with an orchestra of children. Mickey has a date with Baby and dines in her house. Mickey wants Baby in the show, which needs $287. She offers to pay it. Mickey smokes a cigar and leaves sick. Mickey tells Patsy that Baby has to play", "id": "9219785" }, { "contents": "Chela Ruiz\n\n\nChela Ruiz (5 June 1921 - 1 December 1999) was an Argentine actress. Her career spanned radio, film, television and stage, and in 1997 the Argentine Association of Actors awarded her the prestigious Premio Podestá for her theatrical work. Ruiz made her professional debut on Radio Splendid, along with her sister Nora Cullen, working as an actress and reader. In the 1940s and 1950s she was known for her narration of radio plays by Nené Cascallar. She began appearing on stage in 1942. A film career followed later", "id": "10450238" }, { "contents": "Petula Clark\n\n\nher film career in the late 1960s, starring in two big musical films. In \"Finian's Rainbow\" (1968), she starred opposite Fred Astaire and she was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for her performance. With her role, she again made history by becoming Astaire's final on-screen dance partner. The following year she was cast with Peter O'Toole in \"Goodbye, Mr. Chips\" (1969), a musical adaptation of the classic James Hilton novella", "id": "19868394" }, { "contents": "Sara Haden\n\n\n\". Haden later became a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract player in the late 1930s and had smallish roles in many of the studio's films, most notably in the Andy Hardy series starring Mickey Rooney, cast as the spinsterish Aunt Milly Forrest. Haden made her last film, \"Andy Hardy Comes Home\", in 1958, but was active on television until a 1965 guest spot on \"Dr. Kildare\". She was most notable for her stern, humorless characterisations such as a truant officer in Shirley Temple's \"", "id": "16961173" }, { "contents": "Rafaela Ottiano\n\n\n's last film was the musical comedy \"I Married an Angel\" (1942), starring Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. During her career in film, she appeared in approximately 45 motion pictures, opposite such actors as Barbara Stanwyck, Conrad Nagel, Peter Lorre, Zasu Pitts, and Katharine Hepburn. Ottiano lived in the Times Square area during the Prohibition Era and never married. She died in 1942, in the Boston home of her late parents, of intestinal cancer at the age of 54. She is buried at", "id": "9444719" }, { "contents": "Doris Davenport\n\n\nDoris Davenport, also known as Doris Jordan (January 1, 1917 – June 18, 1980) was an American film actress during the 1930s and early 1940s. Davenport was born in Moline, Illinois, but raised in Hollywood, California. She started auditioning for acting roles, and performed in her first film in 1934, titled \"Kid Millions\". From 1934 to 1939, she appeared in only five films, supporting herself by working in New York City as a fashion model between films. However, when she auditioned", "id": "2801211" }, { "contents": "Patricia Dane\n\n\nPatricia Dane (born Thelma Pearl Pippins, August 4, 1919 – June 5, 1995) was an American film actress of the 1940s. Dane was born Thelma Pearl Pippins in Blountstown, Florida and was also known as Thelma Byrnes after her stepfather. She began her career designing clothes for a New York City dress firm and was signed to an MGM contract in 1941. Dane's earliest appearances were two uncredited roles in \"Ziegfeld Girl\" and \"I'll Wait for You\" (both 1941). She played the", "id": "18013995" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\na young girl. Her new contract called for a starting salary of $75 a week and scales up to $1000 a week for the seventh year. In November 1935, Parker purchased a new home in Beverly Hills, California. The following year she joined the ballet school of Dave Gould at MGM, along with Maureen O'Sullivan. By the fall of 1936, Parker was studying singing. She played Marian Hardy in the extremely popular Andy Hardy film series in the late 1930s and early 1940s. She was in the original", "id": "18919251" }, { "contents": "Rooney Mara\n\n\nwas always afraid that I might fail.\" Her first and only role in high school was Juliet in \"Romeo and Juliet\", which she got after being signed up to audition by a friend. Mara acted in a few student films while at NYU, and then began her career in acting, first auditioning at the age of nineteen. Mara first appeared as an extra in films which starred her sister, including a bit-part in the 2005 direct-to-video horror film \"\". She found work", "id": "18311311" }, { "contents": "Georgiana Young\n\n\nBelzer and Gladys Royal. Along with her half-sisters, she was raised Roman Catholic. Young's acting career was short-lived, though she appeared in three films. Her debut role was as Berta Hubbard, sister of Mabel Gardiner Hubbard, in Irving Cummings's 1939 biographical film \"The Story of Alexander Graham Bell\", opposite her sisters Loretta (as Mabel), Sally, and Polly Ann. She would later have bit parts in two other films: \"No, No, Nanette\" (1940)", "id": "6269969" }, { "contents": "Glikeriya Bogdanova-Chesnokova\n\n\nmedals for her service. Following the war, in 1946, Bogdanova-Chesnokova returned to the Leningrad State Theatre of Musical Comedy. In 1947, she received the Stalin Prize. In the mid 1950s, Bogdanova-Chesnokova performed during three circus seasons with the clown, The act involved acrobatic actions. In 1955, Bogdanova-Chesnokova made her first significant film appearance. She played Maria Mikhailovna in the comedy film \"Tamer of Tigers\". Generally, Bogdanova-Chesnokova was a character actress taking supporting roles. However, in", "id": "5458931" }, { "contents": "Judi West\n\n\nJudi West (born December 15, 1942) is an American actress, best known for her supporting role opposite Jack Lemmon in the 1966 comedy film \"The Fortune Cookie. Judi West acted in a few films in the 1960s and also appeared in television in the 1960s through the early 1980s. Her notable film appearances include: She had earlier worked on the Broadway stage including \"A Family Affair\" (1962) and \"She Loves Me\" (1963-1964). Married from 1971 to 1989 to actor John Rubinstein", "id": "5957659" }, { "contents": "Judy Holliday\n\n\nJudy Holliday (born Judith Tuvim, June 21, 1921 – June 7, 1965) was an American actress, comedian, and singer. She began her career as part of a nightclub act before working in Broadway plays and musicals. Her success in the 1946 stage production of \"Born Yesterday\" as Billie Dawn led to her being cast in the 1950 film version for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. She appeared in several films", "id": "15453399" }, { "contents": "Elena Lucena\n\n\nMaría Elena Lucena Arcuri (25 September 1914 – 7 October 2015) was an Argentine film actress of the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema (1940–60). She began her career in radio in the 1930s and reached her greatest success with the role of \"Chimbela\", which was later depicted in film, theater and television. Her extensive film career includes approximately 50 films, including notable performances in \"Chimbela\" (1939) and \"Una noche cualquiera\" (1951). During the 1940s she participated in films with comedians", "id": "16119436" }, { "contents": "Florence Nash\n\n\nLynch in \"Within the Law\". She was a noted theater actor and comedian in vaudeville until the 1930s (appearing in sketches including \"In 1999\"), when she moved to Hollywood to try her luck with films. Her most notable role was as \"Nancy Blake\" in the 1939 MGM blockbuster \"The Women\". She also was the author of a book of verse, \"June Dusk\", published in 1918. After her retirement from acting in 1939, she spent the next decade living comfortably in", "id": "6401074" }, { "contents": "Doris Nolan\n\n\nher jitters, the show was a success and Nolan got positive reviews. When Nolan left the play, Woods sent her back to Hollywood, getting her a contract with Universal Pictures. She continued to move back and forth between movies and theater throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Her most prominent film appearance was in the 1938 version of \"Holiday\", where she played alongside Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Her subsequent film roles went downhill, but she reinvigorated her Broadway career with an 18-month stint in \"The Doughgirls\",", "id": "14779965" }, { "contents": "Marjorie Stapp\n\n\nMarjorie Stapp (September 17, 1921 – June 2, 2014), was an American actress who was mainly in low-budget pictures. Stapp began her film career when she signed a contract with the film studio 20th Century-Fox in the 1940s. Her first screen appearance was in \"The Kid from Brooklyn\", a 1946 film starring Danny Kaye. This was followed by another minor appearance in \"Linda, Be Good\" (1947). Eventually, she landed a leading role in the Western movie \"The", "id": "3140505" }, { "contents": "Roshini (actress)\n\n\nRoshini is an Indian film actress who has worked in the Telugu and Tamil film industries. She is the younger sister actress Jyothika and half sister to Nagma. After getting a recommendation by her sister Nagma, Roshini made her acting debut in Selva's comedy film \"Sishya\", where she played the lead role alongside Karthik. She subsequently starred in \"Master\" (1997), opposite Chiranjeevi. Roshini was keen to accept performance-orientated roles and turned down several offers in late 1997 to be a part of films in", "id": "12724581" }, { "contents": "Lola Albright\n\n\nmotion picture debut with a small singing role in the 1947 musical comedy \"The Unfinished Dance\" and then appeared the following year in two Judy Garland movies: \"The Pirate\" and \"Easter Parade\". She first gained studio and public notice in the 1949 film noir production \"Champion\" with her portrayal of the wife of a manipulative boxing manager; she falls for a prizefighter played by Kirk Douglas. For the next several years, she appeared in secondary roles in over 20 films, including several B westerns. Among", "id": "18089616" }, { "contents": "Marika Rökk\n\n\nthe 1930s and 1940s. She had the technical skill and glamour to carry off the formulaic plots and dialogue and provide German audiences with a home grown star to rival the popular American actresses. \"Der Bettelstudent\" and \"Gasparone\", followed by \"Hello Janine!\" in 1939, all starred her together with Johannes Heesters and established them as the \"dream couple\" of the musical comedy genre. In her appearances she cultivated her \"magyar\" accent conveying a notion of \"paprika\" exoticism. Her films, which", "id": "9061566" }, { "contents": "Fay Wray\n\n\nShe continued to star in various films, including \"The Richest Girl in the World\", a second film with Joel McCrea, but by the early 1940s, her appearances became less frequent. She retired from acting in 1942 after her second marriage but due to financial exigencies soon resumed her acting career, and over the next three decades, Wray appeared in several films and also frequently on television. Wray was cast in the 1953-54 ABC situation comedy \"The Pride of the Family\" as Catherine Morrison. Paul Hartman", "id": "10781506" }, { "contents": "Margaret O'Brien\n\n\n(1944), opposite Judy Garland. As Tootie Smith, the feisty but fragile little sister of Judy Garland, she was a bright point in a very good film, especially in her musical numbers with Garland and during a Halloween sequence in which she confronts a grouchy neighbor. For her performance, she was awarded a special juvenile Oscar in 1944. Margaret and June Allyson were known as \"The Town Criers\" of MGM. \"We were always in competition: I wanted to cry better than June, and June wanted", "id": "7504217" }, { "contents": "Ann Sothern\n\n\nSothern appeared in two musical films in 1948, \"April Showers\" opposite Jack Carson and \"Words and Music\" starring an all-star cast of MGM actors, singers and dancers. In 1949, she appeared in the Academy Award-winning film \"A Letter to Three Wives\" for 20th Century Fox. Sothern received excellent reviews for her performance but the acclaim failed to stimulate her career, which had begun to wane in the late 1940s. In 1949, Sothern contracted hepatitis which she would battle for the next three", "id": "2026182" }, { "contents": "Jane Isbell\n\n\nWar soldier who once saved the life of Andrew Jackson. Clark Isbell's father was also a cousin of Alabama Governor William J. Samford. The Isbells moved to Los Angeles when Jane was an infant. The elder of two sisters, she began modeling and appearing as an extra in films when only four years old. In 1932, she made her first Mickey McGuire comedy starring Mickey Rooney and would eventually make five films in the Mickey McGuire series, similar to the Our Gang films. She grew up with child stars for playmates", "id": "12640286" }, { "contents": "Shirley Palmer (actress)\n\n\n1930 she appeared with Dorothy Sebastian and Neil Hamilton in \"Ladies Must Play\", her only film of that year. In 1932 she appeared in \"This Sporting Age\", and in 1933 she starred in probably her most recognizable role, starring opposite John Wayne in \"Somewhere in Sonora\". It would be her last credited role. She had two uncredited roles following that film, one the same year and the other in 1934, after which her career ended. She married once, to writer John Collier, and", "id": "3797930" }, { "contents": "Betty Grable\n\n\n(1930), starring Eddie Cantor. Although she received no on-screen credit for her performance, she led the film's opening musical number, entitled \"Cowboys\". In 1932, she signed a contract with RKO Radio Pictures, and she was assigned to a succession of acting, singing, and dancing classes at the studio's drama school. Her first film for the studio, \"Probation\" (1932), provided the 14-year-old Grable with her first credited screen role. Over the next few years", "id": "17559458" }, { "contents": "Erika Jayne\n\n\n, and pink.\" Soon after she gave birth to a son, Thomas Zizzo, Jr. After the couple divorced a few years later, she relocated to Los Angeles to pursue her dream of becoming a singer and performer. Early in her career, Girardi worked as a waitress to support herself between acting jobs. Girardi began her acting career in the early 1990s by appearing in small roles in several American television series and films. Her first on-screen appearance was a role as Suzanne Morton in the episode \"Prescription for", "id": "22006264" }, { "contents": "Thelma Scott\n\n\nThelma Scott (17 June 1913 – 23 November 2006) was an Australian character actress and television director whose 70-year career in theatre, radio, film and Australian television made her one of her country's most recognizable and beloved personalities. Having started her career in the early 1930s in theatre and film productions, she became one of the nation's biggest radio performers, during the 1940s featuring in productions such as \"Big Sister\" and \"Blue Hills\". She returned to made for TV films in the early late 1950s and", "id": "7852633" } ]
June Preisser ( June 26 , 1920 -- September 19 , 1984 ) was an American actress , briefly popular in musical films during the late 1930s and early 1940s , many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat . Born in New Orleans , Louisiana , Preisser was one of six children , and was an underweight baby . Her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age , in an attempt to build her strength . There she , and her sister Cherry , learnt acrobatics . Their mother was keen to have them follow a career in showbusiness , especially when their father died suddenly , leaving the family with few options to make a living . When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home , and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville , and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936 . The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States , and also performed in Europe , most notably for . Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage , and June was signed to a film contract by . Her first film Dancing Co-Ed ( 1939 ) provided only a small part , but her next film , Babes in Arms ( 1939 ) , gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland . She performed with Rooney and Garland again in Strike Up the Band ( 1940 ) , and with Rooney in two " Andy Hardy " films , Judge Hardy and Son ( 1939 ) and Andy Hardy 's Private Secretary ( 1941 ) . Gallant Sons ( 1940 ) placed her in a comedic murder mystery , and she played her first lead role opposite [START_ENT] Jimmy Lydon [END_ENT] in ( 1941 ) , and followed this with Sweater Girl ( 1942 ) , opposite Eddie Bracken . She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry , and the birth of a son , Ricky . By this time , MGM had little interest in promoting her , and she left to work for Monogram Pictures . She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years , and played the character " Dodie Rogers " in seven " high school " comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948 . Her final film was ( 1948 ) , and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of Annie Get Your Gun
3ab15fb0-abde-472d-8c13-98488b93a607_June_Preisse:9
[{"answer": "Jimmy Lydon", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "11469494", "title": "Jimmy Lydon"}]}]
[ { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n, and June was signed to a film contract by MGM. Her first film, \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), provided only a small part, but her next film, \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. She performed with Rooney and Garland again in \"Strike Up the Band\" (1940), and with Rooney in two \"Andy Hardy\" films, \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939) and \"Andy Hardy", "id": "17067760" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nJune Preisser (June 26, 1920 – September 19, 1984) was an American actress, popular in musical films during the late 1930s and through the 1940s, many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat. Born in New Orleans, Preisser was one of six children. An underweight child, her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age, in an attempt to build her strength. There she, and her sister Cherry, learned acrobatics. Their mother was keen to have them follow a career", "id": "17067758" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n's Private Secretary\" (1941). \"Gallant Sons\" (1940) placed her in a comedic murder mystery, and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in \"Henry Aldrich for President\" (1941), and followed this with \"Sweater Girl\" (1942), opposite Eddie Bracken. She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry, and the birth of a son, Ricky. By this time, MGM had little interest in promoting her, and she left to work", "id": "17067761" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nfor Monogram Pictures. She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years, and played the character \"Dodie Rogers\" in seven \"high school\" comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948. Her final film was Music Man (1948), and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of \"Annie Get Your Gun\", she retired from acting. She divorced not long after, and taught dancing and acrobatics in Los Angeles, before moving with her son to Florida. They", "id": "17067762" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nin show business, especially when their father died suddenly, leaving the family with few options to make a living. When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home, and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville, and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936. The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States, and also performed in Europe, most notably for George VI of the United Kingdom. Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage", "id": "17067759" }, { "contents": "Melody Trail\n\n\nand Prejudice\" (1940). In 1939, she played the role of Carreen O'Hara, the sister of Scarlet O'Hara, in the film \"Gone with the Wind\". From 1937 to 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. She retired from films in 1950. Rutherford died on June 11, 2012 at her home in Beverly Hills, California. \"Melody Trail\" was filmed August 21–27, 1935. The film had an operating budget of $15,075", "id": "2111015" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nHardy Family movies as a literal girl-next-door to Rooney's character Andy Hardy, in \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938), although Hardy's love interest was played by Lana Turner. They teamed as lead characters for the first time in \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), ultimately appearing in five additional films, including Hardy films \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\" (1940) and \"Life Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland stated that she, Rooney, and other young", "id": "13593082" }, { "contents": "Annie Get Your Gun (film)\n\n\n, MGM's biggest musical comedy star, was originally cast as Annie Oakley. She recorded all her songs for the soundtrack and worked for two months under the direction of Busby Berkeley and dance director Robert Alton. Berkeley and Garland had worked together previously in the late 1930s and early 1940s in a successful series of backstage musicals teaming her with fellow juvenile star Mickey Rooney. Berkeley had been fired from the Garland/Rooney musical \"Girl Crazy\" in 1943 due to personality clashes with musical director Roger Edens and for driving Garland very", "id": "13779025" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nYear for her live recording \"Judy at Carnegie Hall\" (1961). Garland began performing in vaudeville as a child with her two older sisters, and was later signed to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a teenager. Although she appeared in more than two dozen films with MGM and received acclaim for many different roles, she is often best remembered for her portrayal of Dorothy Gale in \"The Wizard of Oz\" (1939). Garland was a frequent on-screen partner of both Mickey Rooney and Gene Kelly,", "id": "13593062" }, { "contents": "Louise LaPlanche\n\n\n, portraying a gypsy girl in \"The Hunchback of Notre Dame\" in 1923. Both LaPlanche began competing in California beauty pageants. In 1939, Louise LaPlanche was crowned Miss Catalina. Her Miss Catalina win led to a film contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). She appeared in the 1940 MGM musical film, \"Strike Up the Band\", which starred Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. LaPlanche later left MGM and signed on to Paramount Studios. She was cast in several Paramount films, including 1942's", "id": "3022959" }, { "contents": "Bonita Granville\n\n\nfilm success led to Granville reprising the role in three sequels from 1938 to 1939, including \"Nancy Drew... Reporter\" (1939). As a young adult, she was once again cast in supporting roles, often in prestigious films such as \"Now, Voyager\" (1942), as well as two Andy Hardy films with Mickey Rooney, \"Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble\" (1944) and \"Love Laughs at Andy Hardy\" (1946). She is also remembered for her starring role in the World", "id": "12873960" }, { "contents": "Eve Arden\n\n\nThis was followed by roles in the crime film \"The Forgotten Woman\" (1939), and the comedy \"At the Circus\" (1939), opposite Groucho Marx, a role that would require her to perform acrobatics. In 1940, she appeared opposite Clark Gable in \"Comrade X\", followed by the drama \"Manpower\" (1941), opposite Marlene Dietrich. She also appeared in a supporting part in the Red Skelton comedy \"Whistling in the Dark\" (1941), and the romantic comedy \"", "id": "10321268" }, { "contents": "Shirley Temple\n\n\nher departure from Twentieth Century-Fox, Shirley was signed by MGM for her comeback; the studio made plans to team her with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney for the Andy Hardy series. The idea was quickly abandoned. The next idea was teaming her with Garland and Rooney for the musical \"Babes on Broadway\". Fearing that either of the latter two could easily upstage Temple, MGM replaced her with Virginia Weidler. As a result, her only film for Metro was \"Kathleen\" in 1941, a story about an", "id": "7504264" }, { "contents": "Barbara Read\n\n\ncompany. When she failed to receive any roles because of her lack of experience, she joined the Laguna Beach Players theater, where she acted in a new play each month for two years. Her first film appearance was one of the three principal girls in the 1936 comedy film \"Three Smart Girls\", which also starred Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. From 1937 through 1939, Read appeared in nine films, most notably starring in \"The Spellbinder\", opposite Lee Tracy. From 1940 through 1948, she appeared in", "id": "5406875" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy\n\n\nLife Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland's character, Betsy Booth, is an aspiring singer and she sings in the first two of these films. However, although Garland songs were planned for the final film, they were eventually dropped. Unlike Garland-Rooney films outside of the \"Andy Hardy\" series, Rooney's Hardy character is not a musician, so Garland and Rooney do not perform together in the Hardy films. Rooney played the character continuously from age 16 to 25, when he appeared in", "id": "7714497" }, { "contents": "Fay Holden\n\n\nthe depression era. Eventually they left Vancouver and moved to Hollywood. Holden appeared in 46 motion pictures between 1935 and 1958, but is best known for her recurring role as Emily Hardy, mother of Mickey Rooney's character in the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" film series. The series was enormously popular in the late 1930s and early '40s, and Holden was in 15 of the 16 Hardy movies, surpassed only by Rooney, who was in all 16. Holden is also remembered for her performance as Hazel, the mother", "id": "15552902" }, { "contents": "Margaret Early\n\n\nBrent, Bette Davis, and Fay Bainter. She later became a freelance actress and found herself working in various roles at such studios as RKO, Warner Bros., and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her other screen roles include parts in \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939), \"Strike Up The Band\" (1940), \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" (1941), and \"Stage Door Canteen\" (1943). She made her last screen appearance in \"Cinderella Jones\" (1946)", "id": "11267109" }, { "contents": "Sheila Darcy\n\n\n1935 her career had taken off, and from then until 1941 she had roles in 41 films. In most of her early films, she played the heroine in B-movies, often Westerns. Darcy's best known roles were as the female lead in cliffhangers, such as the 1939 film \"Zorro's Fighting Legion\", in which she performed opposite Reed Hadley. She also played the Dragon Lady in the serial \"Terry and the Pirates\", released in 1940. In Westerns, she often played opposite popular cowboy", "id": "21067295" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nIn 1937, Rooney made his first film alongside Judy Garland with \"Thoroughbreds Don't Cry\". Garland and Rooney became close friends as they co-starred in future films and became a successful song-and-dance team. Audiences delighted in seeing the \"playful interactions between the two stars showcase a wonderful chemistry\". Along with three of the \"Andy Hardy\" films, where she portrayed a girl attracted to Andy, they appeared together in a string of successful musicals, including \"Babes in Arms\" (1939", "id": "5690267" }, { "contents": "Brenda Marshall\n\n\nArdis Ankerson (September 29, 1915 – July 30, 1992), known as Brenda Marshall, was a Filipino-born, American film actress. Marshall made her first film appearance in the 1939 \"Espionage Agent\". The following year, she played the leading lady to Errol Flynn in \"The Sea Hawk\". After divorcing actor Richard Gaines in 1940, she married William Holden in 1941, and her own career soon slowed. She starred opposite James Cagney in \"Captains of the Clouds\" (1942).", "id": "14392731" }, { "contents": "Julie Haydon\n\n\nmade by MGM. In 1932, she signed with RKO, and her first major role came that year in \"The Conquerors\", directed by William Wellman Her most notable performance came in 1935's \"The Scoundrel\" playing opposite Noël Coward, but, despite a new contract with MGM, only a few more films were to come in her short career, including \"A Family Affair\" (1937), the initial movie in the Andy Hardy series. Some have held that it was Haydon and not Fay Wray who", "id": "19690260" }, { "contents": "Jean Darling\n\n\nAssociation. She turned down an offer to appear alongside Mickey Rooney in one of the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" movies, and went on Broadway, making her debut in the musical \"Count Me In\" in 1942. Darling's stage career hit a real high when she landed the role of Carrie Pipperidge in the original Broadway production of \"Carousel\" in 1945. She appeared in 850 consecutive performances. Her role as Carrie Pipperidge helped her with parts for radio and TV in the 1950s. She hosted her own television show", "id": "1616169" }, { "contents": "List of Lana Turner performances\n\n\nLana Turner was an American actress who appeared in over fifty films during her career, which spanned four decades. Discovered in 1937 at age 16, she signed a contract with Warner Bros. and appeared in several films for the studio before signing a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The studio's co-founder, Louis B. Mayer, helped further her career by casting her in several youth-oriented comedies and musicals, including \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941),", "id": "7891475" }, { "contents": "Marguerite Chapman\n\n\ncontract to Warner Brothers in 1941, and then with Columbia from 1942 to 1948. She made her film debut in 1940, working for the next two years in small roles. In 1942, her big break came with Republic Pictures when she was cast in the leading female role in the twelve-part adventure film serial \"Spy Smasher\", a production that has been ranked among the best serials ever made. Chapman soon began receiving more leading roles and appeared opposite important stars such as Edward G. Robinson and George Sanders.", "id": "2722471" }, { "contents": "Jeanne Cagney\n\n\nRKO Pictures. However, she signed a long-term contract with Paramount Pictures. She appeared in 19 films between 1939 and 1965, including four films with her brother James: \"Yankee Doodle Dandy\" (1942), \"The Time of Your Life\" (1948), \"A Lion Is in the Streets\" (1953), and \"Man of a Thousand Faces\" (1957). Cagney gave a noted performance opposite Mickey Rooney in the film noir crime film \"Quicksand\" (1950). Cagney", "id": "6954933" }, { "contents": "Little Annie Rooney (1925 film)\n\n\nLittle Annie Rooney is a 1925 American silent comedy-drama film starring Mary Pickford and directed by William Beaudine. Pickford, one of the most successful actresses of the silent era, was best known throughout her career for her iconic portrayals of penniless young girls. After generating only modest box office revenue playing adults in her previous two films, Pickford wrote and produced \"Little Annie Rooney\" to cater to silent film audiences. Though she was 33 years old, Pickford played the title role, an Irish girl living in the slums", "id": "236551" }, { "contents": "Edith Barrett\n\n\n, she married leading man Vincent Price in 1938. The marriage ended in 1948. She and Price had one son, author/poet and environmental activist Vincent Barrett Price (born 1940). Her biggest Broadway success was as star of the now-obscure production \"Mrs. Moonlight\". In her first film, \"Ladies in Retirement\" (1941), she played one of the two half-witted half-sisters of Ida Lupino's homicidal character. Her best remembered movie role is possibly Mrs. Holland's mother-", "id": "18853813" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\nHardy film, \"A Family Affair\", in 1937. Mickey Rooney played Andy Hardy in the series, supported by Lewis Stone, Ann Rutherford, and Fay Holden. The movies were directed by George B. Seitz. Parker's character, Marion, appeared in most of the films, and her romances were a recurring feature of the series. Though she and the character she played were absent from the last two Andy Hardy films of the 1940s, Parker came out of retirement to play Marian Hardy in one more movie,", "id": "18919252" }, { "contents": "Nancy Walker\n\n\nrole provided Walker with her film debut when she signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to make a movie version, starring Lucille Ball (filmed in 1943). In 1943, she also appeared with Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in the second film version of \"Girl Crazy\". Her next film, \"Broadway Rhythm\", in which she had a featured musical number backed by Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra, \"Milkman, Keep Those Bottles Quiet\", ended Walker's contract with Metro. Her dry comic", "id": "9657966" }, { "contents": "List of Gloria Stuart performances\n\n\nstarred in two films opposite Shirley Temple: \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936), and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938), both for 20th Century Fox. She subsequently co-starred in \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939) opposite Don Ameche. Dissatisfied with her career in film, Stuart shifted her focus to stage acting. Between 1940 and 1942, Stuart appeared in numerous summer stock plays in New England, including a 1940 production of \"Our Town\" in which she starred alongside its playwright", "id": "19503931" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nBabes in Arms is the 1939 American film version of the 1937 Broadway musical of the same name. The film version stars Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland, and features Charles Winninger, Guy Kibbee, June Preisser, Grace Hayes, and Betty Jaynes. The film concerns a group of youngsters trying to put on a show to prove their vaudevillian parents wrong and make it to Broadway. The original Broadway script was significantly revamped, restructured, and rewritten to accommodate Hollywood's needs. In 1921, vaudeville performer Joe Moran (Winninger)", "id": "9219782" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nhim when he transferred to MGM in 1938. Turner attracted attention by playing the role of a murder victim in her first film, LeRoy's \"They Won't Forget\" (1937), and she later transitioned into featured roles, often appearing as an ingénue. During the early 1940s, Turner established herself as a leading actress and one of MGM's top performers, appearing in such films as the film noir \"Johnny Eager\" (1941); the musical \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941); the horror film", "id": "11929991" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nthe stature of most leading men. He appeared in a number of films, including \"Words and Music\" in 1948, which paired him for the last time with Garland on film (he appeared with her on one episode as a guest on \"The Judy Garland Show\"). He briefly starred in a CBS radio series, \"Shorty Bell\", in the summer of 1948, and reprised his role as \"Andy Hardy\", with most of the original cast, in a syndicated radio version of \"The", "id": "5690276" }, { "contents": "Donna Reed\n\n\nmany starlets at MGM, she played Mickey Rooney's love interest in an Andy Hardy film, in her case the hugely popular \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942). She was second billed in a children's film, \"Mokey\" (1942). Reed played a love interest in \"Calling Dr. Gillespie\" (1942) and \"Apache Trail\" (1942), then did a thriller with Edward Arnold, \"Eyes in the Night\" (1942), directed by Fred Zinnemann. Reed had", "id": "13840841" }, { "contents": "Evalyn Knapp\n\n\nHis Private Secretary\", a light comedy in which Wayne portrays a suit-and-tie wearing playboy determined to win her over. She also appeared in \"Corruption\" that year opposite Preston Foster. One of her better known film roles was opposite Ken Maynard in the 1934 film \"In Old Santa Fe\" featuring Gene Autry in his first screen appearance, in which he sang with a bluegrass band. She worked through 1941, but her career slowed afterward. In 1943, she played her last role, uncredited,", "id": "560741" }, { "contents": "Kathryn Grayson\n\n\nexercise. Within a year, Grayson had her first screen test. However, the studio executives were not satisfied, and she went through a further six months of lessons until she made her first film appearance in 1941's \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" as the character's secretary Kathryn Land. In the film, she takes part in three musical numbers. Two further films were planned for Grayson in 1941; \"White House Girl\", which was later made in 1948 with Durbin, and \"Very Warm for May", "id": "20045432" }, { "contents": "Susi Nicoletti\n\n\nSusi Nicoletti (3 September 1918 – 5 June 2005) was a Bavarian-born actress best remembered today for over 100 supporting roles mostly in comedy films. She was born as Susanne Emilie Luise Adele Habersack in Munich, but spent most of her childhood with her parents in Amsterdam. Back in Munich, she made her stage debut at age 13. Two years later she became a ballerina. In the early 1930s she turned to cabaret. In 1939, she was offered her first film role. In 1940 she moved to", "id": "6091110" }, { "contents": "Dorothy Morris\n\n\nShe did a screen test for the female lead in \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942), but lost to Donna Reed. Appearing in bit parts in several of the studio's more successful films, Morris was signed to a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract in 1941. For one of her early film roles, \"Cry 'Havoc'\" (1943), she affected a British accent. Her next picture was the well-received drama \"The Human Comedy\", which featured a star cast,", "id": "323808" }, { "contents": "The Courtship of Andy Hardy\n\n\nThe Courtship of Andy Hardy is a 1942 film, part of the Andy Hardy series. It gave an early role to Donna Reed although Mickey Rooney had lobbied for his then-wife Ava Gardner to have her part. Within a few months of the film's release, she filed for divorce. This was the 12th entry in the long-running \"Andy Hardy\" series of sixteen. When Carvel teenager and new tow truck-owner Andy Hardy is stopped by a policeman for driving without a license plate, a radio", "id": "20736523" }, { "contents": "Mae Busch\n\n\nMae Busch (18 June 1891 – 20 April 1946) was an Australian-born actress who worked in both silent and sound films in early Hollywood. In the latter part of her career she appeared in many Laurel and Hardy comedies, where she frequently played Hardy's shrewish wife. Mae Busch was born Annie May Busch in Melbourne, Victoria to popular Australian vaudeville performers Elizabeth Maria Lay and Frederick William Busch. Her mother had been active since 1883 under the stage names \"Dora Devere\" and then \"Dora Busch\";", "id": "10830566" }, { "contents": "Hannelore Schroth\n\n\ndebut at the age of nine in 1931's Max Ophüls' comedy \"Dann schon lieber Lebertran\" opposite her mother. Until age sixteen she attended drama school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Her early film successes include \"Spiel im Sommerwind\" (1938), \"Weisser Flieder\" (1939) and \"Kitty und die Weltkonferenz\" (1939) - the latter of which was her first leading role. During World War II, Hannelore Schroth continued performing in films. Unlike her father, Heinrich Schroth, who was by", "id": "16153872" }, { "contents": "Lupe Vélez\n\n\npopular actress, RKO Pictures did not renew her contract in 1934. Over the next few years, Vélez worked for various studio as a freelance actress; she also spent two years in England where she filmed \"The Morals of Marcus\" and \"Gypsy Melody\" (both 1936). She returned to Los Angeles the following year where she appeared in the final part of the Wheeler & Woolsey comedy \"High Flyers\" (1937). Vélez made her final appearance on Broadway in the 1938 musical \"You Never Know\"", "id": "20716058" }, { "contents": "Katharine Kavanaugh\n\n\nher biggest claims to fame was helping to create the Jones Family characters, who would appear in 17 low-budget films between 1936 and 1940. The first film in the series, \"Every Saturday Night\", was released in 1936, and Kavanaugh would also co-write \"Educating Father\", released later that same year. While her screenwriting career cooled in the late 1930s, she continued writing plays that were produced in the Los Angeles area until her death in 1942. She and her husband, Oliver Ziegfeld (", "id": "21036559" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\n, including \"The Wizard of Oz\" and \"Babes in Arms\". She was the fourth person to receive the award as well as only one of twelve in history to ever be presented with one. Garland starred in three films released in 1940: \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\", \"Strike Up the Band\", and \"Little Nellie Kelly\". In the last, she played her first adult role, a dual role of both mother and daughter. \"Little Nellie Kelly\" was purchased from George M.", "id": "13593089" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nliving on her own. In late 1949 Hardi and her husband moved to Jakarta. Two years later she made her feature film debut in a bit role in the Produksi Film Negara (PFN; State Film Corporation)'s \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". The following year she took a starring role in another PFN film, \"Si Pintjang\", portraying an old woman; as she was only twenty-four, she was artificially aged with make-up. That same year she appeared as the lead love interest in", "id": "15623084" }, { "contents": "Jane Frazee\n\n\nB film \"Melody and Moonlight\" (1940) for Republic Pictures. Shortly after the film's release she was signed by Universal Pictures and was featured in \"Buck Privates\", the high-grossing 1941 comedy/World War II film starring Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The strong impression she made in that film elevated her to leading-lady roles in Universal's popular \"B\" musicals, usually appearing opposite Robert Paige. She left Universal in late 1942, when she married actor-director Glenn Tryon, who", "id": "11708629" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\n\n\nAndy Hardy Meets Debutante is a 1940 American romantic comedy film directed by George B. Seitz. The film stars Lewis Stone, Mickey Rooney, Cecilia Parker, Fay Holden and Judy Garland. It is the ninth of the \"Andy Hardy\" full-length film series. Andy Hardy (Mickey Rooney) from Carvel becomes infatuated with a well-known young socialite, Daphne Fowler (Diana Lewis), from New York City. Even though he hasn’t met the woman in person, he drops her name to his friends and", "id": "11382757" }, { "contents": "Martha Vickers\n\n\nplayed minor roles in several films during the early 1940s, working first at Universal Studios and then at RKO Pictures. She next went to Warner Bros., where \"they gave her the star push, rearranging her surname to 'Vickers.'\" Her work there included the role of Carmen Sternwood, the promiscuous, drug-addicted younger sister of Lauren Bacall's character in \"The Big Sleep\" (1946). She also starred in a musical, \"The Time, the Place and the Girl\", followed by", "id": "721594" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nwas over, she was summoned back to work and ultimately performed two songs as a guest in the Rodgers and Hart biopic \"Words and Music\" (1948), which was her last appearance with Mickey Rooney. Despite the all-star cast, \"Words and Music\" barely broke even at the box office. Having regained her strength, as well as some needed weight during her suspension, Garland felt much better and in the fall of 1948, she returned to MGM to replace a pregnant June Allyson for the musical", "id": "13593101" }, { "contents": "Martha O'Driscoll\n\n\n's Dangerous\" (1937), she was not credited by name. In the Deanna Durbin vehicle \"Mad About Music\" (1937), she was billed as \"pretty girl.\" Her face appeared on such advertisements as Charm-Kurl Supreme Cold Wave and Max Factor Hollywood Face Powder. Universal lent O'Driscoll to MGM for parts in \"The Secret of Dr Kildare\" (1939) and \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1940), starring Mickey Rooney. RKO, however, gave O'Driscoll her first two starring", "id": "20196774" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nMarlia Hardi (also Marlia Hardy; 10 March 192718 June 1984) was an Indonesian film actress active from 1951 to 1983. Born in the Central Javan city of Magelang, she took to the stage in the 1940s before moving to Jakarta in 1949. Two years later she made her feature film debut in \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". Over the next two decades she appeared in over seventy films, became recognized for her depictions of mothers, and received the Citra Award for Best Supporting Actress. Despite her productiveness, however", "id": "15623082" }, { "contents": "Susan Peters\n\n\nLos Angeles. After completing filming of the comedy \"Andy Hardy's Double Life\" (1942) in which she had a lead role, Mervyn LeRoy cast Peters in the drama \"Random Harvest\", in which she portrayed a young woman who falls in love with her step-uncle. The film was one of the top 25 highest-earning films of the year, and Peters's performance garnered her critical acclaim, earning her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. The success of \"Random Harvest\" led", "id": "17519590" }, { "contents": "Paulette Goddard\n\n\nshe appeared as an uncredited extra in two films, the Laurel and Hardy short film \"Berth Marks\" (1929), and George Fitzmaurice's drama \"The Locked Door\" (1929). Following her divorce, she briefly visited Europe before returning to Hollywood in late 1930 with her mother. Her second attempt at acting was no more successful than the first, as she landed work only as an extra. In 1930, she signed her first film contract with producer Samuel Goldwyn to appear as a Goldwyn Girl in \"", "id": "3980436" }, { "contents": "Trixie Friganza\n\n\nTrixie Friganza (born Delia O'Callaghan; November 29, 1870 – February 27, 1955) began her career as an operetta soubrette, working her way from the chorus to starring in musical comedies to having her own feature act on the vaudeville circuit. She transitioned to film in the early 1920s mostly playing small characters that were quirky and comedic and retired from the stage in 1940 due to health concerns. She spent her last years teaching drama to young women in a convent school and when she died she left everything to the convent", "id": "13928014" }, { "contents": "Susan Hayward\n\n\nSusan Hayward (born Edythe Marrenner; June 30, 1917 – March 14, 1975) was an American actress and model. After working as a fashion model, Hayward traveled to Hollywood in 1937. She secured a film contract and played several small supporting roles over the next few years. By the late 1940s, the quality of her film roles had improved, and she achieved recognition for her dramatic abilities with the first of five Academy Award nominations for Best Actress for her performance as an alcoholic in \"Smash-Up,", "id": "14143916" }, { "contents": "Nella Walker\n\n\nyear to 1938, she had 23 film appearances. Her biggest film appearance during this period was in \"Young Dr. Kildare\" with Lionel Barrymore and Lew Ayres. Throughout the 1930s, her career was strong, and despite never being a premier star, she repeatedly had solid acting roles. She finished the decade strongly in 1939 with nine film roles, only three of which were uncredited. The 1940s mirrored her success of the previous decade in many ways, with appearances in 37 films from 1940 to 1947. Later in her", "id": "4686869" }, { "contents": "May Wallace\n\n\nMay Wallace (August 23, 1877 – December 11, 1938) was an American film actress. She appeared in 63 films between 1914 and 1939. Wallace was born in Russiaville, Indiana and died in Los Angeles, California, where she worked in Hollywood as a film actress. She often played supporting roles for producer Hal Roach in his Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang comedies, mostly in maternal roles. Wallace was married to Thomas W. Maddox until her death, they had one daughter and one son. She died of", "id": "9169980" }, { "contents": "Ora Carew\n\n\na film editor. Ora's birth year has been listed as 1893, on her death certificate and is also what her grave says, but Utah birth index and the 1900 census indicate 1891. She was educated by private tutors and at Roland Hall Seminary. After her father died on June 19, 1896, her mother moved with her three children to California. Her screen career began with MGM, following numerous engagements in vaudeville, musical comedy and stock. Some of her most notable films with MGM were \"Go West,", "id": "19207733" }, { "contents": "Eilene Janssen\n\n\nMary Eilene Janssen (born May 25, 1938), is a retired American film and television actress. Eilene Janssen was born in Los Angeles, California on May 25, 1938, to parents Henry Janssen and Mary Ellen Thompson. She began her film career as a child actress in the early 1940s. With her father being a longtime worker for Universal Studios, Eilene Janssen made her first screen appearance in the 1940 film \"Sandy Gets Her Man\". She continued to have bit parts in several movies such as \"Two", "id": "12362318" }, { "contents": "Ann Rutherford\n\n\nLouis Mayer originally refused the loan because he considered the role too minor, but Rutherford passionately appealed to him to change his mind. In December 1939, while promoting the new movie, Rutherford visited six Confederate Army veterans at the Confederate Soldiers Home near Atlanta. One of the veterans gave Rutherford a rose corsage tied with Confederate colors. From 1937 until 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. Her first film in this series was \"You're Only Young Once\"", "id": "6472820" }, { "contents": "Gloria Stuart\n\n\nMan\" (1933), followed by roles in the Shirley Temple musicals \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936) and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938). She also starred as Queen Anne in the musical comedy \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939). Beginning in 1940, Stuart slowed her film career, instead performing in regional theater in New England. In 1945, following a tenure as a contract player for Twentieth Century Fox, Stuart abandoned her acting career and shifted to a career as an artist", "id": "3454792" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nand Judy Garland in the Andy Hardy film \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938). During the shoot, Turner completed her studies with an educational social worker, allowing her to graduate high school that year. The film was a box-office success, and her appearance in it as a flirtatious high school student convinced studio head Louis B. Mayer that Turner could be the next Jean Harlow, a sex symbol who had died six months before Turner's arrival at MGM. Mayer helped further Turner's career by giving her", "id": "11930007" }, { "contents": "Linda Darnell\n\n\nLinda Darnell (born Monetta Eloyse Darnell, October 16, 1923April 10, 1965) was an American film actress. Darnell progressed from modeling as a child to acting in theater and film. At the encouragement of her mother, she made her first film in 1939, and appeared in supporting roles in big-budget films for 20th Century Fox throughout the 1940s. She rose to fame with co-starring roles opposite Tyrone Power in adventure films, and established a main character career after her role in \"Forever Amber\" (", "id": "9752181" }, { "contents": "Marcia Mae Jones\n\n\nsigned her to co-star with Jackie Moran in a few rustic romances; when this series lapsed, both Jones and Moran joined Monogram's popular action-comedy series starring Frankie Darro. As a young adult, she continued to work in motion pictures, notably in \"Nine Girls\" (1944) and \"Arson, Inc.\" (1948). Like many familiar faces of the 1940s, she appeared on numerous television programs. In 1951 she appeared as comic foil to Buster Keaton in Keaton's filmed TV series.", "id": "5963847" }, { "contents": "Peggy Drake\n\n\nPeggy Drake (6 October 1922 – 19 September 2014), was an Austrian film and television actress. She primarily appeared in B-movies of the 1940s. Born Lieselotte Mayer in Vienna, Austria, she moved to the United States with her family at the age of three. Her acting career started with an uncredited role in the film \"Too Many Girls\" (1940). Her career was short-lived, appearing in five films between 1940 and 1942, most notably in the serial film \"King of the", "id": "8901594" }, { "contents": "Signe Hasso\n\n\nfilm in Sweden. In 1933, she made her first film, \"Tystnadens hus\", with German film director/cameraman Harry Hasso, whom she married the same year. They had a son by the time she was 19. They divorced in 1941. In 1940, she moved to the United States, where she signed a contract with RKO Pictures, who promoted her as \"the next Garbo\". With few RKO roles forthcoming, she turned to the stage to make a living. According to the Internet Broadway", "id": "19347089" }, { "contents": "Rita La Roy\n\n\nand the \"cobra dance\" in which her feet and legs were tied together under a stylized snakeskin so that she danced by undulating her torso.\" In 1929, she made her film debut in \"The Delightful Rogue\", starring opposite matinee idol Rod La Rocque. Over the next several years, working as part of the RKO Radio Pictures stable, she appeared in both starring and supporting roles. While her final significant role was in the 1940 comedy-mystery \"Hold That Woman!\", she had several small", "id": "13534727" }, { "contents": "Elizabeth Taylor\n\n\nto socially prominent American parents, Taylor moved with her family to Los Angeles in 1939. She made her acting debut in a minor role in the Universal Pictures film \"There's One Born Every Minute\" (1942) but the studio ended her contract after a year. She was then signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and became a popular teen star after appearing in \"National Velvet\" (1944). She transitioned to more mature roles in the 1950s, when she starred in the comedy \"Father of the", "id": "19979789" }, { "contents": "Karin Booth\n\n\nKarin Booth (born June Francis Hoffman, June 19, 1916 – July 27, 2003) was an American film and TV actress of the 1940s to 1960s. She was born June Francis Hoffman on June 19, 1916, in Minneapolis, Minnesota to Francis T. and Ebba V. Hoffman. She lived in Portland and Los Angeles, attending John Marshall High School. She began her career modeling and being a chorus girl in 1939 and was signed under contract to Paramount Pictures in 1941 under the name Katharine Booth. After changing her", "id": "1386964" }, { "contents": "Saranya Ponvannan\n\n\ndebut in Mani Ratnam's production \"Nayakan,\" as the female lead opposite Kamal Haasan in 1987. She made her first Telugu appearance in 1988 film \"Neerajanam;\" her Malayalam debut was a year later in the 1989 film \"Artham\" starring opposite Mamooty. In 1996 almost during the end of her career as a lead actress she debuted in Kannada cinema in \"Appaji\". After marriage in 1995, she semi retired from acting. In 2000 she appeared playing the lead role in the comedy television series, \"", "id": "2557700" }, { "contents": "Franciska Gaal\n\n\n\", opposite Fredric March. She followed this with the comedy \"The Girl Downstairs\" (1938) with Franchot Tone, a remake of her Austrian success \"Catherine the Last\". In 1939, Gaal co-starred with Bing Crosby in the musical \"Paris Honeymoon\". She returned to Hungary in 1940 because of her mother's illness and remained there for the duration of World War II. In 1946, she began work on a new film in Budapest the Soviet-backed \"Renee XIV\" but filming was", "id": "19308441" }, { "contents": "Jo Ann Sayers\n\n\nstudent production and invited her to Hollywood for a screen test. She was offered a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her first credited film role was in 1938. In 1940, she was selected for the titular role in the Broadway production of \"My Sister Eileen\", opposite Shirley Booth, who was two decades Sayers' senior, which opened on December 26, 1940. She remained in the Broadway cast until June 1942, when she left to marry Anthony A. Bliss (1913-1991), a New", "id": "6389492" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nstar Baby Rosalie Essex (June Preisser), but Mickey gets in a fight with Jeff. Mickey tells Judge Black that his parents' show flopped. The judge gives Mickey 30 days to pay damages. Don and Molly sing \"Where or When\" with an orchestra of children. Mickey has a date with Baby and dines in her house. Mickey wants Baby in the show, which needs $287. She offers to pay it. Mickey smokes a cigar and leaves sick. Mickey tells Patsy that Baby has to play", "id": "9219785" }, { "contents": "Chela Ruiz\n\n\nChela Ruiz (5 June 1921 - 1 December 1999) was an Argentine actress. Her career spanned radio, film, television and stage, and in 1997 the Argentine Association of Actors awarded her the prestigious Premio Podestá for her theatrical work. Ruiz made her professional debut on Radio Splendid, along with her sister Nora Cullen, working as an actress and reader. In the 1940s and 1950s she was known for her narration of radio plays by Nené Cascallar. She began appearing on stage in 1942. A film career followed later", "id": "10450238" }, { "contents": "Petula Clark\n\n\nher film career in the late 1960s, starring in two big musical films. In \"Finian's Rainbow\" (1968), she starred opposite Fred Astaire and she was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for her performance. With her role, she again made history by becoming Astaire's final on-screen dance partner. The following year she was cast with Peter O'Toole in \"Goodbye, Mr. Chips\" (1969), a musical adaptation of the classic James Hilton novella", "id": "19868394" }, { "contents": "Sara Haden\n\n\n\". Haden later became a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract player in the late 1930s and had smallish roles in many of the studio's films, most notably in the Andy Hardy series starring Mickey Rooney, cast as the spinsterish Aunt Milly Forrest. Haden made her last film, \"Andy Hardy Comes Home\", in 1958, but was active on television until a 1965 guest spot on \"Dr. Kildare\". She was most notable for her stern, humorless characterisations such as a truant officer in Shirley Temple's \"", "id": "16961173" }, { "contents": "Rafaela Ottiano\n\n\n's last film was the musical comedy \"I Married an Angel\" (1942), starring Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. During her career in film, she appeared in approximately 45 motion pictures, opposite such actors as Barbara Stanwyck, Conrad Nagel, Peter Lorre, Zasu Pitts, and Katharine Hepburn. Ottiano lived in the Times Square area during the Prohibition Era and never married. She died in 1942, in the Boston home of her late parents, of intestinal cancer at the age of 54. She is buried at", "id": "9444719" }, { "contents": "Doris Davenport\n\n\nDoris Davenport, also known as Doris Jordan (January 1, 1917 – June 18, 1980) was an American film actress during the 1930s and early 1940s. Davenport was born in Moline, Illinois, but raised in Hollywood, California. She started auditioning for acting roles, and performed in her first film in 1934, titled \"Kid Millions\". From 1934 to 1939, she appeared in only five films, supporting herself by working in New York City as a fashion model between films. However, when she auditioned", "id": "2801211" }, { "contents": "Patricia Dane\n\n\nPatricia Dane (born Thelma Pearl Pippins, August 4, 1919 – June 5, 1995) was an American film actress of the 1940s. Dane was born Thelma Pearl Pippins in Blountstown, Florida and was also known as Thelma Byrnes after her stepfather. She began her career designing clothes for a New York City dress firm and was signed to an MGM contract in 1941. Dane's earliest appearances were two uncredited roles in \"Ziegfeld Girl\" and \"I'll Wait for You\" (both 1941). She played the", "id": "18013995" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\na young girl. Her new contract called for a starting salary of $75 a week and scales up to $1000 a week for the seventh year. In November 1935, Parker purchased a new home in Beverly Hills, California. The following year she joined the ballet school of Dave Gould at MGM, along with Maureen O'Sullivan. By the fall of 1936, Parker was studying singing. She played Marian Hardy in the extremely popular Andy Hardy film series in the late 1930s and early 1940s. She was in the original", "id": "18919251" }, { "contents": "Rooney Mara\n\n\nwas always afraid that I might fail.\" Her first and only role in high school was Juliet in \"Romeo and Juliet\", which she got after being signed up to audition by a friend. Mara acted in a few student films while at NYU, and then began her career in acting, first auditioning at the age of nineteen. Mara first appeared as an extra in films which starred her sister, including a bit-part in the 2005 direct-to-video horror film \"\". She found work", "id": "18311311" }, { "contents": "Georgiana Young\n\n\nBelzer and Gladys Royal. Along with her half-sisters, she was raised Roman Catholic. Young's acting career was short-lived, though she appeared in three films. Her debut role was as Berta Hubbard, sister of Mabel Gardiner Hubbard, in Irving Cummings's 1939 biographical film \"The Story of Alexander Graham Bell\", opposite her sisters Loretta (as Mabel), Sally, and Polly Ann. She would later have bit parts in two other films: \"No, No, Nanette\" (1940)", "id": "6269969" }, { "contents": "Glikeriya Bogdanova-Chesnokova\n\n\nmedals for her service. Following the war, in 1946, Bogdanova-Chesnokova returned to the Leningrad State Theatre of Musical Comedy. In 1947, she received the Stalin Prize. In the mid 1950s, Bogdanova-Chesnokova performed during three circus seasons with the clown, The act involved acrobatic actions. In 1955, Bogdanova-Chesnokova made her first significant film appearance. She played Maria Mikhailovna in the comedy film \"Tamer of Tigers\". Generally, Bogdanova-Chesnokova was a character actress taking supporting roles. However, in", "id": "5458931" }, { "contents": "Judi West\n\n\nJudi West (born December 15, 1942) is an American actress, best known for her supporting role opposite Jack Lemmon in the 1966 comedy film \"The Fortune Cookie. Judi West acted in a few films in the 1960s and also appeared in television in the 1960s through the early 1980s. Her notable film appearances include: She had earlier worked on the Broadway stage including \"A Family Affair\" (1962) and \"She Loves Me\" (1963-1964). Married from 1971 to 1989 to actor John Rubinstein", "id": "5957659" }, { "contents": "Judy Holliday\n\n\nJudy Holliday (born Judith Tuvim, June 21, 1921 – June 7, 1965) was an American actress, comedian, and singer. She began her career as part of a nightclub act before working in Broadway plays and musicals. Her success in the 1946 stage production of \"Born Yesterday\" as Billie Dawn led to her being cast in the 1950 film version for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. She appeared in several films", "id": "15453399" }, { "contents": "Elena Lucena\n\n\nMaría Elena Lucena Arcuri (25 September 1914 – 7 October 2015) was an Argentine film actress of the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema (1940–60). She began her career in radio in the 1930s and reached her greatest success with the role of \"Chimbela\", which was later depicted in film, theater and television. Her extensive film career includes approximately 50 films, including notable performances in \"Chimbela\" (1939) and \"Una noche cualquiera\" (1951). During the 1940s she participated in films with comedians", "id": "16119436" }, { "contents": "Florence Nash\n\n\nLynch in \"Within the Law\". She was a noted theater actor and comedian in vaudeville until the 1930s (appearing in sketches including \"In 1999\"), when she moved to Hollywood to try her luck with films. Her most notable role was as \"Nancy Blake\" in the 1939 MGM blockbuster \"The Women\". She also was the author of a book of verse, \"June Dusk\", published in 1918. After her retirement from acting in 1939, she spent the next decade living comfortably in", "id": "6401074" }, { "contents": "Doris Nolan\n\n\nher jitters, the show was a success and Nolan got positive reviews. When Nolan left the play, Woods sent her back to Hollywood, getting her a contract with Universal Pictures. She continued to move back and forth between movies and theater throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Her most prominent film appearance was in the 1938 version of \"Holiday\", where she played alongside Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Her subsequent film roles went downhill, but she reinvigorated her Broadway career with an 18-month stint in \"The Doughgirls\",", "id": "14779965" }, { "contents": "Marjorie Stapp\n\n\nMarjorie Stapp (September 17, 1921 – June 2, 2014), was an American actress who was mainly in low-budget pictures. Stapp began her film career when she signed a contract with the film studio 20th Century-Fox in the 1940s. Her first screen appearance was in \"The Kid from Brooklyn\", a 1946 film starring Danny Kaye. This was followed by another minor appearance in \"Linda, Be Good\" (1947). Eventually, she landed a leading role in the Western movie \"The", "id": "3140505" }, { "contents": "Roshini (actress)\n\n\nRoshini is an Indian film actress who has worked in the Telugu and Tamil film industries. She is the younger sister actress Jyothika and half sister to Nagma. After getting a recommendation by her sister Nagma, Roshini made her acting debut in Selva's comedy film \"Sishya\", where she played the lead role alongside Karthik. She subsequently starred in \"Master\" (1997), opposite Chiranjeevi. Roshini was keen to accept performance-orientated roles and turned down several offers in late 1997 to be a part of films in", "id": "12724581" }, { "contents": "Lola Albright\n\n\nmotion picture debut with a small singing role in the 1947 musical comedy \"The Unfinished Dance\" and then appeared the following year in two Judy Garland movies: \"The Pirate\" and \"Easter Parade\". She first gained studio and public notice in the 1949 film noir production \"Champion\" with her portrayal of the wife of a manipulative boxing manager; she falls for a prizefighter played by Kirk Douglas. For the next several years, she appeared in secondary roles in over 20 films, including several B westerns. Among", "id": "18089616" }, { "contents": "Marika Rökk\n\n\nthe 1930s and 1940s. She had the technical skill and glamour to carry off the formulaic plots and dialogue and provide German audiences with a home grown star to rival the popular American actresses. \"Der Bettelstudent\" and \"Gasparone\", followed by \"Hello Janine!\" in 1939, all starred her together with Johannes Heesters and established them as the \"dream couple\" of the musical comedy genre. In her appearances she cultivated her \"magyar\" accent conveying a notion of \"paprika\" exoticism. Her films, which", "id": "9061566" }, { "contents": "Fay Wray\n\n\nShe continued to star in various films, including \"The Richest Girl in the World\", a second film with Joel McCrea, but by the early 1940s, her appearances became less frequent. She retired from acting in 1942 after her second marriage but due to financial exigencies soon resumed her acting career, and over the next three decades, Wray appeared in several films and also frequently on television. Wray was cast in the 1953-54 ABC situation comedy \"The Pride of the Family\" as Catherine Morrison. Paul Hartman", "id": "10781506" }, { "contents": "Margaret O'Brien\n\n\n(1944), opposite Judy Garland. As Tootie Smith, the feisty but fragile little sister of Judy Garland, she was a bright point in a very good film, especially in her musical numbers with Garland and during a Halloween sequence in which she confronts a grouchy neighbor. For her performance, she was awarded a special juvenile Oscar in 1944. Margaret and June Allyson were known as \"The Town Criers\" of MGM. \"We were always in competition: I wanted to cry better than June, and June wanted", "id": "7504217" }, { "contents": "Ann Sothern\n\n\nSothern appeared in two musical films in 1948, \"April Showers\" opposite Jack Carson and \"Words and Music\" starring an all-star cast of MGM actors, singers and dancers. In 1949, she appeared in the Academy Award-winning film \"A Letter to Three Wives\" for 20th Century Fox. Sothern received excellent reviews for her performance but the acclaim failed to stimulate her career, which had begun to wane in the late 1940s. In 1949, Sothern contracted hepatitis which she would battle for the next three", "id": "2026182" }, { "contents": "Jane Isbell\n\n\nWar soldier who once saved the life of Andrew Jackson. Clark Isbell's father was also a cousin of Alabama Governor William J. Samford. The Isbells moved to Los Angeles when Jane was an infant. The elder of two sisters, she began modeling and appearing as an extra in films when only four years old. In 1932, she made her first Mickey McGuire comedy starring Mickey Rooney and would eventually make five films in the Mickey McGuire series, similar to the Our Gang films. She grew up with child stars for playmates", "id": "12640286" }, { "contents": "Shirley Palmer (actress)\n\n\n1930 she appeared with Dorothy Sebastian and Neil Hamilton in \"Ladies Must Play\", her only film of that year. In 1932 she appeared in \"This Sporting Age\", and in 1933 she starred in probably her most recognizable role, starring opposite John Wayne in \"Somewhere in Sonora\". It would be her last credited role. She had two uncredited roles following that film, one the same year and the other in 1934, after which her career ended. She married once, to writer John Collier, and", "id": "3797930" }, { "contents": "Betty Grable\n\n\n(1930), starring Eddie Cantor. Although she received no on-screen credit for her performance, she led the film's opening musical number, entitled \"Cowboys\". In 1932, she signed a contract with RKO Radio Pictures, and she was assigned to a succession of acting, singing, and dancing classes at the studio's drama school. Her first film for the studio, \"Probation\" (1932), provided the 14-year-old Grable with her first credited screen role. Over the next few years", "id": "17559458" }, { "contents": "Erika Jayne\n\n\n, and pink.\" Soon after she gave birth to a son, Thomas Zizzo, Jr. After the couple divorced a few years later, she relocated to Los Angeles to pursue her dream of becoming a singer and performer. Early in her career, Girardi worked as a waitress to support herself between acting jobs. Girardi began her acting career in the early 1990s by appearing in small roles in several American television series and films. Her first on-screen appearance was a role as Suzanne Morton in the episode \"Prescription for", "id": "22006264" }, { "contents": "Thelma Scott\n\n\nThelma Scott (17 June 1913 – 23 November 2006) was an Australian character actress and television director whose 70-year career in theatre, radio, film and Australian television made her one of her country's most recognizable and beloved personalities. Having started her career in the early 1930s in theatre and film productions, she became one of the nation's biggest radio performers, during the 1940s featuring in productions such as \"Big Sister\" and \"Blue Hills\". She returned to made for TV films in the early late 1950s and", "id": "7852633" } ]
June Preisser ( June 26 , 1920 -- September 19 , 1984 ) was an American actress , briefly popular in musical films during the late 1930s and early 1940s , many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat . Born in New Orleans , Louisiana , Preisser was one of six children , and was an underweight baby . Her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age , in an attempt to build her strength . There she , and her sister Cherry , learnt acrobatics . Their mother was keen to have them follow a career in showbusiness , especially when their father died suddenly , leaving the family with few options to make a living . When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home , and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville , and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936 . The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States , and also performed in Europe , most notably for . Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage , and June was signed to a film contract by . Her first film Dancing Co-Ed ( 1939 ) provided only a small part , but her next film , Babes in Arms ( 1939 ) , gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland . She performed with Rooney and Garland again in Strike Up the Band ( 1940 ) , and with Rooney in two " Andy Hardy " films , Judge Hardy and Son ( 1939 ) and Andy Hardy 's Private Secretary ( 1941 ) . Gallant Sons ( 1940 ) placed her in a comedic murder mystery , and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in ( 1941 ) , and followed this with [START_ENT] Sweater Girl [END_ENT] ( 1942 ) , opposite Eddie Bracken . She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry , and the birth of a son , Ricky . By this time , MGM had little interest in promoting her , and she left to work for Monogram Pictures . She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years , and played the character " Dodie Rogers " in seven " high school " comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948 . Her final film was ( 1948 ) , and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of Annie Get Your Gun
089ae5d3-6912-4722-a070-439790ebe800_June_Preisse:10
[{"answer": "Sweater Girl (film)", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "34543746", "title": "Sweater Girl (film)"}]}]
[ { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n, and June was signed to a film contract by MGM. Her first film, \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), provided only a small part, but her next film, \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. She performed with Rooney and Garland again in \"Strike Up the Band\" (1940), and with Rooney in two \"Andy Hardy\" films, \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939) and \"Andy Hardy", "id": "17067760" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nJune Preisser (June 26, 1920 – September 19, 1984) was an American actress, popular in musical films during the late 1930s and through the 1940s, many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat. Born in New Orleans, Preisser was one of six children. An underweight child, her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age, in an attempt to build her strength. There she, and her sister Cherry, learned acrobatics. Their mother was keen to have them follow a career", "id": "17067758" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n's Private Secretary\" (1941). \"Gallant Sons\" (1940) placed her in a comedic murder mystery, and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in \"Henry Aldrich for President\" (1941), and followed this with \"Sweater Girl\" (1942), opposite Eddie Bracken. She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry, and the birth of a son, Ricky. By this time, MGM had little interest in promoting her, and she left to work", "id": "17067761" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nfor Monogram Pictures. She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years, and played the character \"Dodie Rogers\" in seven \"high school\" comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948. Her final film was Music Man (1948), and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of \"Annie Get Your Gun\", she retired from acting. She divorced not long after, and taught dancing and acrobatics in Los Angeles, before moving with her son to Florida. They", "id": "17067762" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nin show business, especially when their father died suddenly, leaving the family with few options to make a living. When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home, and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville, and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936. The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States, and also performed in Europe, most notably for George VI of the United Kingdom. Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage", "id": "17067759" }, { "contents": "Melody Trail\n\n\nand Prejudice\" (1940). In 1939, she played the role of Carreen O'Hara, the sister of Scarlet O'Hara, in the film \"Gone with the Wind\". From 1937 to 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. She retired from films in 1950. Rutherford died on June 11, 2012 at her home in Beverly Hills, California. \"Melody Trail\" was filmed August 21–27, 1935. The film had an operating budget of $15,075", "id": "2111015" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nHardy Family movies as a literal girl-next-door to Rooney's character Andy Hardy, in \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938), although Hardy's love interest was played by Lana Turner. They teamed as lead characters for the first time in \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), ultimately appearing in five additional films, including Hardy films \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\" (1940) and \"Life Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland stated that she, Rooney, and other young", "id": "13593082" }, { "contents": "Annie Get Your Gun (film)\n\n\n, MGM's biggest musical comedy star, was originally cast as Annie Oakley. She recorded all her songs for the soundtrack and worked for two months under the direction of Busby Berkeley and dance director Robert Alton. Berkeley and Garland had worked together previously in the late 1930s and early 1940s in a successful series of backstage musicals teaming her with fellow juvenile star Mickey Rooney. Berkeley had been fired from the Garland/Rooney musical \"Girl Crazy\" in 1943 due to personality clashes with musical director Roger Edens and for driving Garland very", "id": "13779025" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nYear for her live recording \"Judy at Carnegie Hall\" (1961). Garland began performing in vaudeville as a child with her two older sisters, and was later signed to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a teenager. Although she appeared in more than two dozen films with MGM and received acclaim for many different roles, she is often best remembered for her portrayal of Dorothy Gale in \"The Wizard of Oz\" (1939). Garland was a frequent on-screen partner of both Mickey Rooney and Gene Kelly,", "id": "13593062" }, { "contents": "Louise LaPlanche\n\n\n, portraying a gypsy girl in \"The Hunchback of Notre Dame\" in 1923. Both LaPlanche began competing in California beauty pageants. In 1939, Louise LaPlanche was crowned Miss Catalina. Her Miss Catalina win led to a film contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). She appeared in the 1940 MGM musical film, \"Strike Up the Band\", which starred Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. LaPlanche later left MGM and signed on to Paramount Studios. She was cast in several Paramount films, including 1942's", "id": "3022959" }, { "contents": "Bonita Granville\n\n\nfilm success led to Granville reprising the role in three sequels from 1938 to 1939, including \"Nancy Drew... Reporter\" (1939). As a young adult, she was once again cast in supporting roles, often in prestigious films such as \"Now, Voyager\" (1942), as well as two Andy Hardy films with Mickey Rooney, \"Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble\" (1944) and \"Love Laughs at Andy Hardy\" (1946). She is also remembered for her starring role in the World", "id": "12873960" }, { "contents": "Eve Arden\n\n\nThis was followed by roles in the crime film \"The Forgotten Woman\" (1939), and the comedy \"At the Circus\" (1939), opposite Groucho Marx, a role that would require her to perform acrobatics. In 1940, she appeared opposite Clark Gable in \"Comrade X\", followed by the drama \"Manpower\" (1941), opposite Marlene Dietrich. She also appeared in a supporting part in the Red Skelton comedy \"Whistling in the Dark\" (1941), and the romantic comedy \"", "id": "10321268" }, { "contents": "Shirley Temple\n\n\nher departure from Twentieth Century-Fox, Shirley was signed by MGM for her comeback; the studio made plans to team her with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney for the Andy Hardy series. The idea was quickly abandoned. The next idea was teaming her with Garland and Rooney for the musical \"Babes on Broadway\". Fearing that either of the latter two could easily upstage Temple, MGM replaced her with Virginia Weidler. As a result, her only film for Metro was \"Kathleen\" in 1941, a story about an", "id": "7504264" }, { "contents": "Barbara Read\n\n\ncompany. When she failed to receive any roles because of her lack of experience, she joined the Laguna Beach Players theater, where she acted in a new play each month for two years. Her first film appearance was one of the three principal girls in the 1936 comedy film \"Three Smart Girls\", which also starred Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. From 1937 through 1939, Read appeared in nine films, most notably starring in \"The Spellbinder\", opposite Lee Tracy. From 1940 through 1948, she appeared in", "id": "5406875" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy\n\n\nLife Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland's character, Betsy Booth, is an aspiring singer and she sings in the first two of these films. However, although Garland songs were planned for the final film, they were eventually dropped. Unlike Garland-Rooney films outside of the \"Andy Hardy\" series, Rooney's Hardy character is not a musician, so Garland and Rooney do not perform together in the Hardy films. Rooney played the character continuously from age 16 to 25, when he appeared in", "id": "7714497" }, { "contents": "Fay Holden\n\n\nthe depression era. Eventually they left Vancouver and moved to Hollywood. Holden appeared in 46 motion pictures between 1935 and 1958, but is best known for her recurring role as Emily Hardy, mother of Mickey Rooney's character in the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" film series. The series was enormously popular in the late 1930s and early '40s, and Holden was in 15 of the 16 Hardy movies, surpassed only by Rooney, who was in all 16. Holden is also remembered for her performance as Hazel, the mother", "id": "15552902" }, { "contents": "Margaret Early\n\n\nBrent, Bette Davis, and Fay Bainter. She later became a freelance actress and found herself working in various roles at such studios as RKO, Warner Bros., and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her other screen roles include parts in \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939), \"Strike Up The Band\" (1940), \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" (1941), and \"Stage Door Canteen\" (1943). She made her last screen appearance in \"Cinderella Jones\" (1946)", "id": "11267109" }, { "contents": "Sheila Darcy\n\n\n1935 her career had taken off, and from then until 1941 she had roles in 41 films. In most of her early films, she played the heroine in B-movies, often Westerns. Darcy's best known roles were as the female lead in cliffhangers, such as the 1939 film \"Zorro's Fighting Legion\", in which she performed opposite Reed Hadley. She also played the Dragon Lady in the serial \"Terry and the Pirates\", released in 1940. In Westerns, she often played opposite popular cowboy", "id": "21067295" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nIn 1937, Rooney made his first film alongside Judy Garland with \"Thoroughbreds Don't Cry\". Garland and Rooney became close friends as they co-starred in future films and became a successful song-and-dance team. Audiences delighted in seeing the \"playful interactions between the two stars showcase a wonderful chemistry\". Along with three of the \"Andy Hardy\" films, where she portrayed a girl attracted to Andy, they appeared together in a string of successful musicals, including \"Babes in Arms\" (1939", "id": "5690267" }, { "contents": "Brenda Marshall\n\n\nArdis Ankerson (September 29, 1915 – July 30, 1992), known as Brenda Marshall, was a Filipino-born, American film actress. Marshall made her first film appearance in the 1939 \"Espionage Agent\". The following year, she played the leading lady to Errol Flynn in \"The Sea Hawk\". After divorcing actor Richard Gaines in 1940, she married William Holden in 1941, and her own career soon slowed. She starred opposite James Cagney in \"Captains of the Clouds\" (1942).", "id": "14392731" }, { "contents": "Julie Haydon\n\n\nmade by MGM. In 1932, she signed with RKO, and her first major role came that year in \"The Conquerors\", directed by William Wellman Her most notable performance came in 1935's \"The Scoundrel\" playing opposite Noël Coward, but, despite a new contract with MGM, only a few more films were to come in her short career, including \"A Family Affair\" (1937), the initial movie in the Andy Hardy series. Some have held that it was Haydon and not Fay Wray who", "id": "19690260" }, { "contents": "Jean Darling\n\n\nAssociation. She turned down an offer to appear alongside Mickey Rooney in one of the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" movies, and went on Broadway, making her debut in the musical \"Count Me In\" in 1942. Darling's stage career hit a real high when she landed the role of Carrie Pipperidge in the original Broadway production of \"Carousel\" in 1945. She appeared in 850 consecutive performances. Her role as Carrie Pipperidge helped her with parts for radio and TV in the 1950s. She hosted her own television show", "id": "1616169" }, { "contents": "List of Lana Turner performances\n\n\nLana Turner was an American actress who appeared in over fifty films during her career, which spanned four decades. Discovered in 1937 at age 16, she signed a contract with Warner Bros. and appeared in several films for the studio before signing a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The studio's co-founder, Louis B. Mayer, helped further her career by casting her in several youth-oriented comedies and musicals, including \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941),", "id": "7891475" }, { "contents": "Marguerite Chapman\n\n\ncontract to Warner Brothers in 1941, and then with Columbia from 1942 to 1948. She made her film debut in 1940, working for the next two years in small roles. In 1942, her big break came with Republic Pictures when she was cast in the leading female role in the twelve-part adventure film serial \"Spy Smasher\", a production that has been ranked among the best serials ever made. Chapman soon began receiving more leading roles and appeared opposite important stars such as Edward G. Robinson and George Sanders.", "id": "2722471" }, { "contents": "Jeanne Cagney\n\n\nRKO Pictures. However, she signed a long-term contract with Paramount Pictures. She appeared in 19 films between 1939 and 1965, including four films with her brother James: \"Yankee Doodle Dandy\" (1942), \"The Time of Your Life\" (1948), \"A Lion Is in the Streets\" (1953), and \"Man of a Thousand Faces\" (1957). Cagney gave a noted performance opposite Mickey Rooney in the film noir crime film \"Quicksand\" (1950). Cagney", "id": "6954933" }, { "contents": "Little Annie Rooney (1925 film)\n\n\nLittle Annie Rooney is a 1925 American silent comedy-drama film starring Mary Pickford and directed by William Beaudine. Pickford, one of the most successful actresses of the silent era, was best known throughout her career for her iconic portrayals of penniless young girls. After generating only modest box office revenue playing adults in her previous two films, Pickford wrote and produced \"Little Annie Rooney\" to cater to silent film audiences. Though she was 33 years old, Pickford played the title role, an Irish girl living in the slums", "id": "236551" }, { "contents": "Edith Barrett\n\n\n, she married leading man Vincent Price in 1938. The marriage ended in 1948. She and Price had one son, author/poet and environmental activist Vincent Barrett Price (born 1940). Her biggest Broadway success was as star of the now-obscure production \"Mrs. Moonlight\". In her first film, \"Ladies in Retirement\" (1941), she played one of the two half-witted half-sisters of Ida Lupino's homicidal character. Her best remembered movie role is possibly Mrs. Holland's mother-", "id": "18853813" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\nHardy film, \"A Family Affair\", in 1937. Mickey Rooney played Andy Hardy in the series, supported by Lewis Stone, Ann Rutherford, and Fay Holden. The movies were directed by George B. Seitz. Parker's character, Marion, appeared in most of the films, and her romances were a recurring feature of the series. Though she and the character she played were absent from the last two Andy Hardy films of the 1940s, Parker came out of retirement to play Marian Hardy in one more movie,", "id": "18919252" }, { "contents": "Nancy Walker\n\n\nrole provided Walker with her film debut when she signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to make a movie version, starring Lucille Ball (filmed in 1943). In 1943, she also appeared with Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in the second film version of \"Girl Crazy\". Her next film, \"Broadway Rhythm\", in which she had a featured musical number backed by Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra, \"Milkman, Keep Those Bottles Quiet\", ended Walker's contract with Metro. Her dry comic", "id": "9657966" }, { "contents": "List of Gloria Stuart performances\n\n\nstarred in two films opposite Shirley Temple: \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936), and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938), both for 20th Century Fox. She subsequently co-starred in \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939) opposite Don Ameche. Dissatisfied with her career in film, Stuart shifted her focus to stage acting. Between 1940 and 1942, Stuart appeared in numerous summer stock plays in New England, including a 1940 production of \"Our Town\" in which she starred alongside its playwright", "id": "19503931" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nBabes in Arms is the 1939 American film version of the 1937 Broadway musical of the same name. The film version stars Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland, and features Charles Winninger, Guy Kibbee, June Preisser, Grace Hayes, and Betty Jaynes. The film concerns a group of youngsters trying to put on a show to prove their vaudevillian parents wrong and make it to Broadway. The original Broadway script was significantly revamped, restructured, and rewritten to accommodate Hollywood's needs. In 1921, vaudeville performer Joe Moran (Winninger)", "id": "9219782" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nhim when he transferred to MGM in 1938. Turner attracted attention by playing the role of a murder victim in her first film, LeRoy's \"They Won't Forget\" (1937), and she later transitioned into featured roles, often appearing as an ingénue. During the early 1940s, Turner established herself as a leading actress and one of MGM's top performers, appearing in such films as the film noir \"Johnny Eager\" (1941); the musical \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941); the horror film", "id": "11929991" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nthe stature of most leading men. He appeared in a number of films, including \"Words and Music\" in 1948, which paired him for the last time with Garland on film (he appeared with her on one episode as a guest on \"The Judy Garland Show\"). He briefly starred in a CBS radio series, \"Shorty Bell\", in the summer of 1948, and reprised his role as \"Andy Hardy\", with most of the original cast, in a syndicated radio version of \"The", "id": "5690276" }, { "contents": "Donna Reed\n\n\nmany starlets at MGM, she played Mickey Rooney's love interest in an Andy Hardy film, in her case the hugely popular \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942). She was second billed in a children's film, \"Mokey\" (1942). Reed played a love interest in \"Calling Dr. Gillespie\" (1942) and \"Apache Trail\" (1942), then did a thriller with Edward Arnold, \"Eyes in the Night\" (1942), directed by Fred Zinnemann. Reed had", "id": "13840841" }, { "contents": "Evalyn Knapp\n\n\nHis Private Secretary\", a light comedy in which Wayne portrays a suit-and-tie wearing playboy determined to win her over. She also appeared in \"Corruption\" that year opposite Preston Foster. One of her better known film roles was opposite Ken Maynard in the 1934 film \"In Old Santa Fe\" featuring Gene Autry in his first screen appearance, in which he sang with a bluegrass band. She worked through 1941, but her career slowed afterward. In 1943, she played her last role, uncredited,", "id": "560741" }, { "contents": "Kathryn Grayson\n\n\nexercise. Within a year, Grayson had her first screen test. However, the studio executives were not satisfied, and she went through a further six months of lessons until she made her first film appearance in 1941's \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" as the character's secretary Kathryn Land. In the film, she takes part in three musical numbers. Two further films were planned for Grayson in 1941; \"White House Girl\", which was later made in 1948 with Durbin, and \"Very Warm for May", "id": "20045432" }, { "contents": "Susi Nicoletti\n\n\nSusi Nicoletti (3 September 1918 – 5 June 2005) was a Bavarian-born actress best remembered today for over 100 supporting roles mostly in comedy films. She was born as Susanne Emilie Luise Adele Habersack in Munich, but spent most of her childhood with her parents in Amsterdam. Back in Munich, she made her stage debut at age 13. Two years later she became a ballerina. In the early 1930s she turned to cabaret. In 1939, she was offered her first film role. In 1940 she moved to", "id": "6091110" }, { "contents": "Dorothy Morris\n\n\nShe did a screen test for the female lead in \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942), but lost to Donna Reed. Appearing in bit parts in several of the studio's more successful films, Morris was signed to a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract in 1941. For one of her early film roles, \"Cry 'Havoc'\" (1943), she affected a British accent. Her next picture was the well-received drama \"The Human Comedy\", which featured a star cast,", "id": "323808" }, { "contents": "The Courtship of Andy Hardy\n\n\nThe Courtship of Andy Hardy is a 1942 film, part of the Andy Hardy series. It gave an early role to Donna Reed although Mickey Rooney had lobbied for his then-wife Ava Gardner to have her part. Within a few months of the film's release, she filed for divorce. This was the 12th entry in the long-running \"Andy Hardy\" series of sixteen. When Carvel teenager and new tow truck-owner Andy Hardy is stopped by a policeman for driving without a license plate, a radio", "id": "20736523" }, { "contents": "Mae Busch\n\n\nMae Busch (18 June 1891 – 20 April 1946) was an Australian-born actress who worked in both silent and sound films in early Hollywood. In the latter part of her career she appeared in many Laurel and Hardy comedies, where she frequently played Hardy's shrewish wife. Mae Busch was born Annie May Busch in Melbourne, Victoria to popular Australian vaudeville performers Elizabeth Maria Lay and Frederick William Busch. Her mother had been active since 1883 under the stage names \"Dora Devere\" and then \"Dora Busch\";", "id": "10830566" }, { "contents": "Hannelore Schroth\n\n\ndebut at the age of nine in 1931's Max Ophüls' comedy \"Dann schon lieber Lebertran\" opposite her mother. Until age sixteen she attended drama school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Her early film successes include \"Spiel im Sommerwind\" (1938), \"Weisser Flieder\" (1939) and \"Kitty und die Weltkonferenz\" (1939) - the latter of which was her first leading role. During World War II, Hannelore Schroth continued performing in films. Unlike her father, Heinrich Schroth, who was by", "id": "16153872" }, { "contents": "Lupe Vélez\n\n\npopular actress, RKO Pictures did not renew her contract in 1934. Over the next few years, Vélez worked for various studio as a freelance actress; she also spent two years in England where she filmed \"The Morals of Marcus\" and \"Gypsy Melody\" (both 1936). She returned to Los Angeles the following year where she appeared in the final part of the Wheeler & Woolsey comedy \"High Flyers\" (1937). Vélez made her final appearance on Broadway in the 1938 musical \"You Never Know\"", "id": "20716058" }, { "contents": "Katharine Kavanaugh\n\n\nher biggest claims to fame was helping to create the Jones Family characters, who would appear in 17 low-budget films between 1936 and 1940. The first film in the series, \"Every Saturday Night\", was released in 1936, and Kavanaugh would also co-write \"Educating Father\", released later that same year. While her screenwriting career cooled in the late 1930s, she continued writing plays that were produced in the Los Angeles area until her death in 1942. She and her husband, Oliver Ziegfeld (", "id": "21036559" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\n, including \"The Wizard of Oz\" and \"Babes in Arms\". She was the fourth person to receive the award as well as only one of twelve in history to ever be presented with one. Garland starred in three films released in 1940: \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\", \"Strike Up the Band\", and \"Little Nellie Kelly\". In the last, she played her first adult role, a dual role of both mother and daughter. \"Little Nellie Kelly\" was purchased from George M.", "id": "13593089" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nliving on her own. In late 1949 Hardi and her husband moved to Jakarta. Two years later she made her feature film debut in a bit role in the Produksi Film Negara (PFN; State Film Corporation)'s \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". The following year she took a starring role in another PFN film, \"Si Pintjang\", portraying an old woman; as she was only twenty-four, she was artificially aged with make-up. That same year she appeared as the lead love interest in", "id": "15623084" }, { "contents": "Jane Frazee\n\n\nB film \"Melody and Moonlight\" (1940) for Republic Pictures. Shortly after the film's release she was signed by Universal Pictures and was featured in \"Buck Privates\", the high-grossing 1941 comedy/World War II film starring Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The strong impression she made in that film elevated her to leading-lady roles in Universal's popular \"B\" musicals, usually appearing opposite Robert Paige. She left Universal in late 1942, when she married actor-director Glenn Tryon, who", "id": "11708629" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\n\n\nAndy Hardy Meets Debutante is a 1940 American romantic comedy film directed by George B. Seitz. The film stars Lewis Stone, Mickey Rooney, Cecilia Parker, Fay Holden and Judy Garland. It is the ninth of the \"Andy Hardy\" full-length film series. Andy Hardy (Mickey Rooney) from Carvel becomes infatuated with a well-known young socialite, Daphne Fowler (Diana Lewis), from New York City. Even though he hasn’t met the woman in person, he drops her name to his friends and", "id": "11382757" }, { "contents": "Martha Vickers\n\n\nplayed minor roles in several films during the early 1940s, working first at Universal Studios and then at RKO Pictures. She next went to Warner Bros., where \"they gave her the star push, rearranging her surname to 'Vickers.'\" Her work there included the role of Carmen Sternwood, the promiscuous, drug-addicted younger sister of Lauren Bacall's character in \"The Big Sleep\" (1946). She also starred in a musical, \"The Time, the Place and the Girl\", followed by", "id": "721594" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nwas over, she was summoned back to work and ultimately performed two songs as a guest in the Rodgers and Hart biopic \"Words and Music\" (1948), which was her last appearance with Mickey Rooney. Despite the all-star cast, \"Words and Music\" barely broke even at the box office. Having regained her strength, as well as some needed weight during her suspension, Garland felt much better and in the fall of 1948, she returned to MGM to replace a pregnant June Allyson for the musical", "id": "13593101" }, { "contents": "Martha O'Driscoll\n\n\n's Dangerous\" (1937), she was not credited by name. In the Deanna Durbin vehicle \"Mad About Music\" (1937), she was billed as \"pretty girl.\" Her face appeared on such advertisements as Charm-Kurl Supreme Cold Wave and Max Factor Hollywood Face Powder. Universal lent O'Driscoll to MGM for parts in \"The Secret of Dr Kildare\" (1939) and \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1940), starring Mickey Rooney. RKO, however, gave O'Driscoll her first two starring", "id": "20196774" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nMarlia Hardi (also Marlia Hardy; 10 March 192718 June 1984) was an Indonesian film actress active from 1951 to 1983. Born in the Central Javan city of Magelang, she took to the stage in the 1940s before moving to Jakarta in 1949. Two years later she made her feature film debut in \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". Over the next two decades she appeared in over seventy films, became recognized for her depictions of mothers, and received the Citra Award for Best Supporting Actress. Despite her productiveness, however", "id": "15623082" }, { "contents": "Susan Peters\n\n\nLos Angeles. After completing filming of the comedy \"Andy Hardy's Double Life\" (1942) in which she had a lead role, Mervyn LeRoy cast Peters in the drama \"Random Harvest\", in which she portrayed a young woman who falls in love with her step-uncle. The film was one of the top 25 highest-earning films of the year, and Peters's performance garnered her critical acclaim, earning her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. The success of \"Random Harvest\" led", "id": "17519590" }, { "contents": "Paulette Goddard\n\n\nshe appeared as an uncredited extra in two films, the Laurel and Hardy short film \"Berth Marks\" (1929), and George Fitzmaurice's drama \"The Locked Door\" (1929). Following her divorce, she briefly visited Europe before returning to Hollywood in late 1930 with her mother. Her second attempt at acting was no more successful than the first, as she landed work only as an extra. In 1930, she signed her first film contract with producer Samuel Goldwyn to appear as a Goldwyn Girl in \"", "id": "3980436" }, { "contents": "Trixie Friganza\n\n\nTrixie Friganza (born Delia O'Callaghan; November 29, 1870 – February 27, 1955) began her career as an operetta soubrette, working her way from the chorus to starring in musical comedies to having her own feature act on the vaudeville circuit. She transitioned to film in the early 1920s mostly playing small characters that were quirky and comedic and retired from the stage in 1940 due to health concerns. She spent her last years teaching drama to young women in a convent school and when she died she left everything to the convent", "id": "13928014" }, { "contents": "Susan Hayward\n\n\nSusan Hayward (born Edythe Marrenner; June 30, 1917 – March 14, 1975) was an American actress and model. After working as a fashion model, Hayward traveled to Hollywood in 1937. She secured a film contract and played several small supporting roles over the next few years. By the late 1940s, the quality of her film roles had improved, and she achieved recognition for her dramatic abilities with the first of five Academy Award nominations for Best Actress for her performance as an alcoholic in \"Smash-Up,", "id": "14143916" }, { "contents": "Nella Walker\n\n\nyear to 1938, she had 23 film appearances. Her biggest film appearance during this period was in \"Young Dr. Kildare\" with Lionel Barrymore and Lew Ayres. Throughout the 1930s, her career was strong, and despite never being a premier star, she repeatedly had solid acting roles. She finished the decade strongly in 1939 with nine film roles, only three of which were uncredited. The 1940s mirrored her success of the previous decade in many ways, with appearances in 37 films from 1940 to 1947. Later in her", "id": "4686869" }, { "contents": "May Wallace\n\n\nMay Wallace (August 23, 1877 – December 11, 1938) was an American film actress. She appeared in 63 films between 1914 and 1939. Wallace was born in Russiaville, Indiana and died in Los Angeles, California, where she worked in Hollywood as a film actress. She often played supporting roles for producer Hal Roach in his Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang comedies, mostly in maternal roles. Wallace was married to Thomas W. Maddox until her death, they had one daughter and one son. She died of", "id": "9169980" }, { "contents": "Ora Carew\n\n\na film editor. Ora's birth year has been listed as 1893, on her death certificate and is also what her grave says, but Utah birth index and the 1900 census indicate 1891. She was educated by private tutors and at Roland Hall Seminary. After her father died on June 19, 1896, her mother moved with her three children to California. Her screen career began with MGM, following numerous engagements in vaudeville, musical comedy and stock. Some of her most notable films with MGM were \"Go West,", "id": "19207733" }, { "contents": "Eilene Janssen\n\n\nMary Eilene Janssen (born May 25, 1938), is a retired American film and television actress. Eilene Janssen was born in Los Angeles, California on May 25, 1938, to parents Henry Janssen and Mary Ellen Thompson. She began her film career as a child actress in the early 1940s. With her father being a longtime worker for Universal Studios, Eilene Janssen made her first screen appearance in the 1940 film \"Sandy Gets Her Man\". She continued to have bit parts in several movies such as \"Two", "id": "12362318" }, { "contents": "Ann Rutherford\n\n\nLouis Mayer originally refused the loan because he considered the role too minor, but Rutherford passionately appealed to him to change his mind. In December 1939, while promoting the new movie, Rutherford visited six Confederate Army veterans at the Confederate Soldiers Home near Atlanta. One of the veterans gave Rutherford a rose corsage tied with Confederate colors. From 1937 until 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. Her first film in this series was \"You're Only Young Once\"", "id": "6472820" }, { "contents": "Gloria Stuart\n\n\nMan\" (1933), followed by roles in the Shirley Temple musicals \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936) and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938). She also starred as Queen Anne in the musical comedy \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939). Beginning in 1940, Stuart slowed her film career, instead performing in regional theater in New England. In 1945, following a tenure as a contract player for Twentieth Century Fox, Stuart abandoned her acting career and shifted to a career as an artist", "id": "3454792" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nand Judy Garland in the Andy Hardy film \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938). During the shoot, Turner completed her studies with an educational social worker, allowing her to graduate high school that year. The film was a box-office success, and her appearance in it as a flirtatious high school student convinced studio head Louis B. Mayer that Turner could be the next Jean Harlow, a sex symbol who had died six months before Turner's arrival at MGM. Mayer helped further Turner's career by giving her", "id": "11930007" }, { "contents": "Linda Darnell\n\n\nLinda Darnell (born Monetta Eloyse Darnell, October 16, 1923April 10, 1965) was an American film actress. Darnell progressed from modeling as a child to acting in theater and film. At the encouragement of her mother, she made her first film in 1939, and appeared in supporting roles in big-budget films for 20th Century Fox throughout the 1940s. She rose to fame with co-starring roles opposite Tyrone Power in adventure films, and established a main character career after her role in \"Forever Amber\" (", "id": "9752181" }, { "contents": "Marcia Mae Jones\n\n\nsigned her to co-star with Jackie Moran in a few rustic romances; when this series lapsed, both Jones and Moran joined Monogram's popular action-comedy series starring Frankie Darro. As a young adult, she continued to work in motion pictures, notably in \"Nine Girls\" (1944) and \"Arson, Inc.\" (1948). Like many familiar faces of the 1940s, she appeared on numerous television programs. In 1951 she appeared as comic foil to Buster Keaton in Keaton's filmed TV series.", "id": "5963847" }, { "contents": "Peggy Drake\n\n\nPeggy Drake (6 October 1922 – 19 September 2014), was an Austrian film and television actress. She primarily appeared in B-movies of the 1940s. Born Lieselotte Mayer in Vienna, Austria, she moved to the United States with her family at the age of three. Her acting career started with an uncredited role in the film \"Too Many Girls\" (1940). Her career was short-lived, appearing in five films between 1940 and 1942, most notably in the serial film \"King of the", "id": "8901594" }, { "contents": "Signe Hasso\n\n\nfilm in Sweden. In 1933, she made her first film, \"Tystnadens hus\", with German film director/cameraman Harry Hasso, whom she married the same year. They had a son by the time she was 19. They divorced in 1941. In 1940, she moved to the United States, where she signed a contract with RKO Pictures, who promoted her as \"the next Garbo\". With few RKO roles forthcoming, she turned to the stage to make a living. According to the Internet Broadway", "id": "19347089" }, { "contents": "Rita La Roy\n\n\nand the \"cobra dance\" in which her feet and legs were tied together under a stylized snakeskin so that she danced by undulating her torso.\" In 1929, she made her film debut in \"The Delightful Rogue\", starring opposite matinee idol Rod La Rocque. Over the next several years, working as part of the RKO Radio Pictures stable, she appeared in both starring and supporting roles. While her final significant role was in the 1940 comedy-mystery \"Hold That Woman!\", she had several small", "id": "13534727" }, { "contents": "Elizabeth Taylor\n\n\nto socially prominent American parents, Taylor moved with her family to Los Angeles in 1939. She made her acting debut in a minor role in the Universal Pictures film \"There's One Born Every Minute\" (1942) but the studio ended her contract after a year. She was then signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and became a popular teen star after appearing in \"National Velvet\" (1944). She transitioned to more mature roles in the 1950s, when she starred in the comedy \"Father of the", "id": "19979789" }, { "contents": "Karin Booth\n\n\nKarin Booth (born June Francis Hoffman, June 19, 1916 – July 27, 2003) was an American film and TV actress of the 1940s to 1960s. She was born June Francis Hoffman on June 19, 1916, in Minneapolis, Minnesota to Francis T. and Ebba V. Hoffman. She lived in Portland and Los Angeles, attending John Marshall High School. She began her career modeling and being a chorus girl in 1939 and was signed under contract to Paramount Pictures in 1941 under the name Katharine Booth. After changing her", "id": "1386964" }, { "contents": "Saranya Ponvannan\n\n\ndebut in Mani Ratnam's production \"Nayakan,\" as the female lead opposite Kamal Haasan in 1987. She made her first Telugu appearance in 1988 film \"Neerajanam;\" her Malayalam debut was a year later in the 1989 film \"Artham\" starring opposite Mamooty. In 1996 almost during the end of her career as a lead actress she debuted in Kannada cinema in \"Appaji\". After marriage in 1995, she semi retired from acting. In 2000 she appeared playing the lead role in the comedy television series, \"", "id": "2557700" }, { "contents": "Franciska Gaal\n\n\n\", opposite Fredric March. She followed this with the comedy \"The Girl Downstairs\" (1938) with Franchot Tone, a remake of her Austrian success \"Catherine the Last\". In 1939, Gaal co-starred with Bing Crosby in the musical \"Paris Honeymoon\". She returned to Hungary in 1940 because of her mother's illness and remained there for the duration of World War II. In 1946, she began work on a new film in Budapest the Soviet-backed \"Renee XIV\" but filming was", "id": "19308441" }, { "contents": "Jo Ann Sayers\n\n\nstudent production and invited her to Hollywood for a screen test. She was offered a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her first credited film role was in 1938. In 1940, she was selected for the titular role in the Broadway production of \"My Sister Eileen\", opposite Shirley Booth, who was two decades Sayers' senior, which opened on December 26, 1940. She remained in the Broadway cast until June 1942, when she left to marry Anthony A. Bliss (1913-1991), a New", "id": "6389492" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nstar Baby Rosalie Essex (June Preisser), but Mickey gets in a fight with Jeff. Mickey tells Judge Black that his parents' show flopped. The judge gives Mickey 30 days to pay damages. Don and Molly sing \"Where or When\" with an orchestra of children. Mickey has a date with Baby and dines in her house. Mickey wants Baby in the show, which needs $287. She offers to pay it. Mickey smokes a cigar and leaves sick. Mickey tells Patsy that Baby has to play", "id": "9219785" }, { "contents": "Chela Ruiz\n\n\nChela Ruiz (5 June 1921 - 1 December 1999) was an Argentine actress. Her career spanned radio, film, television and stage, and in 1997 the Argentine Association of Actors awarded her the prestigious Premio Podestá for her theatrical work. Ruiz made her professional debut on Radio Splendid, along with her sister Nora Cullen, working as an actress and reader. In the 1940s and 1950s she was known for her narration of radio plays by Nené Cascallar. She began appearing on stage in 1942. A film career followed later", "id": "10450238" }, { "contents": "Petula Clark\n\n\nher film career in the late 1960s, starring in two big musical films. In \"Finian's Rainbow\" (1968), she starred opposite Fred Astaire and she was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for her performance. With her role, she again made history by becoming Astaire's final on-screen dance partner. The following year she was cast with Peter O'Toole in \"Goodbye, Mr. Chips\" (1969), a musical adaptation of the classic James Hilton novella", "id": "19868394" }, { "contents": "Sara Haden\n\n\n\". Haden later became a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract player in the late 1930s and had smallish roles in many of the studio's films, most notably in the Andy Hardy series starring Mickey Rooney, cast as the spinsterish Aunt Milly Forrest. Haden made her last film, \"Andy Hardy Comes Home\", in 1958, but was active on television until a 1965 guest spot on \"Dr. Kildare\". She was most notable for her stern, humorless characterisations such as a truant officer in Shirley Temple's \"", "id": "16961173" }, { "contents": "Rafaela Ottiano\n\n\n's last film was the musical comedy \"I Married an Angel\" (1942), starring Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. During her career in film, she appeared in approximately 45 motion pictures, opposite such actors as Barbara Stanwyck, Conrad Nagel, Peter Lorre, Zasu Pitts, and Katharine Hepburn. Ottiano lived in the Times Square area during the Prohibition Era and never married. She died in 1942, in the Boston home of her late parents, of intestinal cancer at the age of 54. She is buried at", "id": "9444719" }, { "contents": "Doris Davenport\n\n\nDoris Davenport, also known as Doris Jordan (January 1, 1917 – June 18, 1980) was an American film actress during the 1930s and early 1940s. Davenport was born in Moline, Illinois, but raised in Hollywood, California. She started auditioning for acting roles, and performed in her first film in 1934, titled \"Kid Millions\". From 1934 to 1939, she appeared in only five films, supporting herself by working in New York City as a fashion model between films. However, when she auditioned", "id": "2801211" }, { "contents": "Patricia Dane\n\n\nPatricia Dane (born Thelma Pearl Pippins, August 4, 1919 – June 5, 1995) was an American film actress of the 1940s. Dane was born Thelma Pearl Pippins in Blountstown, Florida and was also known as Thelma Byrnes after her stepfather. She began her career designing clothes for a New York City dress firm and was signed to an MGM contract in 1941. Dane's earliest appearances were two uncredited roles in \"Ziegfeld Girl\" and \"I'll Wait for You\" (both 1941). She played the", "id": "18013995" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\na young girl. Her new contract called for a starting salary of $75 a week and scales up to $1000 a week for the seventh year. In November 1935, Parker purchased a new home in Beverly Hills, California. The following year she joined the ballet school of Dave Gould at MGM, along with Maureen O'Sullivan. By the fall of 1936, Parker was studying singing. She played Marian Hardy in the extremely popular Andy Hardy film series in the late 1930s and early 1940s. She was in the original", "id": "18919251" }, { "contents": "Rooney Mara\n\n\nwas always afraid that I might fail.\" Her first and only role in high school was Juliet in \"Romeo and Juliet\", which she got after being signed up to audition by a friend. Mara acted in a few student films while at NYU, and then began her career in acting, first auditioning at the age of nineteen. Mara first appeared as an extra in films which starred her sister, including a bit-part in the 2005 direct-to-video horror film \"\". She found work", "id": "18311311" }, { "contents": "Georgiana Young\n\n\nBelzer and Gladys Royal. Along with her half-sisters, she was raised Roman Catholic. Young's acting career was short-lived, though she appeared in three films. Her debut role was as Berta Hubbard, sister of Mabel Gardiner Hubbard, in Irving Cummings's 1939 biographical film \"The Story of Alexander Graham Bell\", opposite her sisters Loretta (as Mabel), Sally, and Polly Ann. She would later have bit parts in two other films: \"No, No, Nanette\" (1940)", "id": "6269969" }, { "contents": "Glikeriya Bogdanova-Chesnokova\n\n\nmedals for her service. Following the war, in 1946, Bogdanova-Chesnokova returned to the Leningrad State Theatre of Musical Comedy. In 1947, she received the Stalin Prize. In the mid 1950s, Bogdanova-Chesnokova performed during three circus seasons with the clown, The act involved acrobatic actions. In 1955, Bogdanova-Chesnokova made her first significant film appearance. She played Maria Mikhailovna in the comedy film \"Tamer of Tigers\". Generally, Bogdanova-Chesnokova was a character actress taking supporting roles. However, in", "id": "5458931" }, { "contents": "Judi West\n\n\nJudi West (born December 15, 1942) is an American actress, best known for her supporting role opposite Jack Lemmon in the 1966 comedy film \"The Fortune Cookie. Judi West acted in a few films in the 1960s and also appeared in television in the 1960s through the early 1980s. Her notable film appearances include: She had earlier worked on the Broadway stage including \"A Family Affair\" (1962) and \"She Loves Me\" (1963-1964). Married from 1971 to 1989 to actor John Rubinstein", "id": "5957659" }, { "contents": "Judy Holliday\n\n\nJudy Holliday (born Judith Tuvim, June 21, 1921 – June 7, 1965) was an American actress, comedian, and singer. She began her career as part of a nightclub act before working in Broadway plays and musicals. Her success in the 1946 stage production of \"Born Yesterday\" as Billie Dawn led to her being cast in the 1950 film version for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. She appeared in several films", "id": "15453399" }, { "contents": "Elena Lucena\n\n\nMaría Elena Lucena Arcuri (25 September 1914 – 7 October 2015) was an Argentine film actress of the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema (1940–60). She began her career in radio in the 1930s and reached her greatest success with the role of \"Chimbela\", which was later depicted in film, theater and television. Her extensive film career includes approximately 50 films, including notable performances in \"Chimbela\" (1939) and \"Una noche cualquiera\" (1951). During the 1940s she participated in films with comedians", "id": "16119436" }, { "contents": "Florence Nash\n\n\nLynch in \"Within the Law\". She was a noted theater actor and comedian in vaudeville until the 1930s (appearing in sketches including \"In 1999\"), when she moved to Hollywood to try her luck with films. Her most notable role was as \"Nancy Blake\" in the 1939 MGM blockbuster \"The Women\". She also was the author of a book of verse, \"June Dusk\", published in 1918. After her retirement from acting in 1939, she spent the next decade living comfortably in", "id": "6401074" }, { "contents": "Doris Nolan\n\n\nher jitters, the show was a success and Nolan got positive reviews. When Nolan left the play, Woods sent her back to Hollywood, getting her a contract with Universal Pictures. She continued to move back and forth between movies and theater throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Her most prominent film appearance was in the 1938 version of \"Holiday\", where she played alongside Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Her subsequent film roles went downhill, but she reinvigorated her Broadway career with an 18-month stint in \"The Doughgirls\",", "id": "14779965" }, { "contents": "Marjorie Stapp\n\n\nMarjorie Stapp (September 17, 1921 – June 2, 2014), was an American actress who was mainly in low-budget pictures. Stapp began her film career when she signed a contract with the film studio 20th Century-Fox in the 1940s. Her first screen appearance was in \"The Kid from Brooklyn\", a 1946 film starring Danny Kaye. This was followed by another minor appearance in \"Linda, Be Good\" (1947). Eventually, she landed a leading role in the Western movie \"The", "id": "3140505" }, { "contents": "Roshini (actress)\n\n\nRoshini is an Indian film actress who has worked in the Telugu and Tamil film industries. She is the younger sister actress Jyothika and half sister to Nagma. After getting a recommendation by her sister Nagma, Roshini made her acting debut in Selva's comedy film \"Sishya\", where she played the lead role alongside Karthik. She subsequently starred in \"Master\" (1997), opposite Chiranjeevi. Roshini was keen to accept performance-orientated roles and turned down several offers in late 1997 to be a part of films in", "id": "12724581" }, { "contents": "Lola Albright\n\n\nmotion picture debut with a small singing role in the 1947 musical comedy \"The Unfinished Dance\" and then appeared the following year in two Judy Garland movies: \"The Pirate\" and \"Easter Parade\". She first gained studio and public notice in the 1949 film noir production \"Champion\" with her portrayal of the wife of a manipulative boxing manager; she falls for a prizefighter played by Kirk Douglas. For the next several years, she appeared in secondary roles in over 20 films, including several B westerns. Among", "id": "18089616" }, { "contents": "Marika Rökk\n\n\nthe 1930s and 1940s. She had the technical skill and glamour to carry off the formulaic plots and dialogue and provide German audiences with a home grown star to rival the popular American actresses. \"Der Bettelstudent\" and \"Gasparone\", followed by \"Hello Janine!\" in 1939, all starred her together with Johannes Heesters and established them as the \"dream couple\" of the musical comedy genre. In her appearances she cultivated her \"magyar\" accent conveying a notion of \"paprika\" exoticism. Her films, which", "id": "9061566" }, { "contents": "Fay Wray\n\n\nShe continued to star in various films, including \"The Richest Girl in the World\", a second film with Joel McCrea, but by the early 1940s, her appearances became less frequent. She retired from acting in 1942 after her second marriage but due to financial exigencies soon resumed her acting career, and over the next three decades, Wray appeared in several films and also frequently on television. Wray was cast in the 1953-54 ABC situation comedy \"The Pride of the Family\" as Catherine Morrison. Paul Hartman", "id": "10781506" }, { "contents": "Margaret O'Brien\n\n\n(1944), opposite Judy Garland. As Tootie Smith, the feisty but fragile little sister of Judy Garland, she was a bright point in a very good film, especially in her musical numbers with Garland and during a Halloween sequence in which she confronts a grouchy neighbor. For her performance, she was awarded a special juvenile Oscar in 1944. Margaret and June Allyson were known as \"The Town Criers\" of MGM. \"We were always in competition: I wanted to cry better than June, and June wanted", "id": "7504217" }, { "contents": "Ann Sothern\n\n\nSothern appeared in two musical films in 1948, \"April Showers\" opposite Jack Carson and \"Words and Music\" starring an all-star cast of MGM actors, singers and dancers. In 1949, she appeared in the Academy Award-winning film \"A Letter to Three Wives\" for 20th Century Fox. Sothern received excellent reviews for her performance but the acclaim failed to stimulate her career, which had begun to wane in the late 1940s. In 1949, Sothern contracted hepatitis which she would battle for the next three", "id": "2026182" }, { "contents": "Jane Isbell\n\n\nWar soldier who once saved the life of Andrew Jackson. Clark Isbell's father was also a cousin of Alabama Governor William J. Samford. The Isbells moved to Los Angeles when Jane was an infant. The elder of two sisters, she began modeling and appearing as an extra in films when only four years old. In 1932, she made her first Mickey McGuire comedy starring Mickey Rooney and would eventually make five films in the Mickey McGuire series, similar to the Our Gang films. She grew up with child stars for playmates", "id": "12640286" }, { "contents": "Shirley Palmer (actress)\n\n\n1930 she appeared with Dorothy Sebastian and Neil Hamilton in \"Ladies Must Play\", her only film of that year. In 1932 she appeared in \"This Sporting Age\", and in 1933 she starred in probably her most recognizable role, starring opposite John Wayne in \"Somewhere in Sonora\". It would be her last credited role. She had two uncredited roles following that film, one the same year and the other in 1934, after which her career ended. She married once, to writer John Collier, and", "id": "3797930" }, { "contents": "Betty Grable\n\n\n(1930), starring Eddie Cantor. Although she received no on-screen credit for her performance, she led the film's opening musical number, entitled \"Cowboys\". In 1932, she signed a contract with RKO Radio Pictures, and she was assigned to a succession of acting, singing, and dancing classes at the studio's drama school. Her first film for the studio, \"Probation\" (1932), provided the 14-year-old Grable with her first credited screen role. Over the next few years", "id": "17559458" }, { "contents": "Erika Jayne\n\n\n, and pink.\" Soon after she gave birth to a son, Thomas Zizzo, Jr. After the couple divorced a few years later, she relocated to Los Angeles to pursue her dream of becoming a singer and performer. Early in her career, Girardi worked as a waitress to support herself between acting jobs. Girardi began her acting career in the early 1990s by appearing in small roles in several American television series and films. Her first on-screen appearance was a role as Suzanne Morton in the episode \"Prescription for", "id": "22006264" }, { "contents": "Thelma Scott\n\n\nThelma Scott (17 June 1913 – 23 November 2006) was an Australian character actress and television director whose 70-year career in theatre, radio, film and Australian television made her one of her country's most recognizable and beloved personalities. Having started her career in the early 1930s in theatre and film productions, she became one of the nation's biggest radio performers, during the 1940s featuring in productions such as \"Big Sister\" and \"Blue Hills\". She returned to made for TV films in the early late 1950s and", "id": "7852633" } ]
June Preisser ( June 26 , 1920 -- September 19 , 1984 ) was an American actress , briefly popular in musical films during the late 1930s and early 1940s , many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat . Born in New Orleans , Louisiana , Preisser was one of six children , and was an underweight baby . Her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age , in an attempt to build her strength . There she , and her sister Cherry , learnt acrobatics . Their mother was keen to have them follow a career in showbusiness , especially when their father died suddenly , leaving the family with few options to make a living . When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home , and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville , and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936 . The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States , and also performed in Europe , most notably for . Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage , and June was signed to a film contract by . Her first film Dancing Co-Ed ( 1939 ) provided only a small part , but her next film , Babes in Arms ( 1939 ) , gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland . She performed with Rooney and Garland again in Strike Up the Band ( 1940 ) , and with Rooney in two " Andy Hardy " films , Judge Hardy and Son ( 1939 ) and Andy Hardy 's Private Secretary ( 1941 ) . Gallant Sons ( 1940 ) placed her in a comedic murder mystery , and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in ( 1941 ) , and followed this with Sweater Girl ( 1942 ) , opposite [START_ENT] Eddie Bracken [END_ENT] . She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry , and the birth of a son , Ricky . By this time , MGM had little interest in promoting her , and she left to work for Monogram Pictures . She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years , and played the character " Dodie Rogers " in seven " high school " comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948 . Her final film was ( 1948 ) , and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of Annie Get Your Gun
19b9f17e-d287-4c81-a542-a565c3c7c1b1_June_Preisse:11
[{"answer": "Eddie Bracken", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "149731", "title": "Eddie Bracken"}]}]
[ { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n, and June was signed to a film contract by MGM. Her first film, \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), provided only a small part, but her next film, \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. She performed with Rooney and Garland again in \"Strike Up the Band\" (1940), and with Rooney in two \"Andy Hardy\" films, \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939) and \"Andy Hardy", "id": "17067760" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nJune Preisser (June 26, 1920 – September 19, 1984) was an American actress, popular in musical films during the late 1930s and through the 1940s, many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat. Born in New Orleans, Preisser was one of six children. An underweight child, her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age, in an attempt to build her strength. There she, and her sister Cherry, learned acrobatics. Their mother was keen to have them follow a career", "id": "17067758" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n's Private Secretary\" (1941). \"Gallant Sons\" (1940) placed her in a comedic murder mystery, and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in \"Henry Aldrich for President\" (1941), and followed this with \"Sweater Girl\" (1942), opposite Eddie Bracken. She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry, and the birth of a son, Ricky. By this time, MGM had little interest in promoting her, and she left to work", "id": "17067761" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nfor Monogram Pictures. She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years, and played the character \"Dodie Rogers\" in seven \"high school\" comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948. Her final film was Music Man (1948), and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of \"Annie Get Your Gun\", she retired from acting. She divorced not long after, and taught dancing and acrobatics in Los Angeles, before moving with her son to Florida. They", "id": "17067762" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nin show business, especially when their father died suddenly, leaving the family with few options to make a living. When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home, and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville, and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936. The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States, and also performed in Europe, most notably for George VI of the United Kingdom. Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage", "id": "17067759" }, { "contents": "Melody Trail\n\n\nand Prejudice\" (1940). In 1939, she played the role of Carreen O'Hara, the sister of Scarlet O'Hara, in the film \"Gone with the Wind\". From 1937 to 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. She retired from films in 1950. Rutherford died on June 11, 2012 at her home in Beverly Hills, California. \"Melody Trail\" was filmed August 21–27, 1935. The film had an operating budget of $15,075", "id": "2111015" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nHardy Family movies as a literal girl-next-door to Rooney's character Andy Hardy, in \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938), although Hardy's love interest was played by Lana Turner. They teamed as lead characters for the first time in \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), ultimately appearing in five additional films, including Hardy films \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\" (1940) and \"Life Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland stated that she, Rooney, and other young", "id": "13593082" }, { "contents": "Annie Get Your Gun (film)\n\n\n, MGM's biggest musical comedy star, was originally cast as Annie Oakley. She recorded all her songs for the soundtrack and worked for two months under the direction of Busby Berkeley and dance director Robert Alton. Berkeley and Garland had worked together previously in the late 1930s and early 1940s in a successful series of backstage musicals teaming her with fellow juvenile star Mickey Rooney. Berkeley had been fired from the Garland/Rooney musical \"Girl Crazy\" in 1943 due to personality clashes with musical director Roger Edens and for driving Garland very", "id": "13779025" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nYear for her live recording \"Judy at Carnegie Hall\" (1961). Garland began performing in vaudeville as a child with her two older sisters, and was later signed to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a teenager. Although she appeared in more than two dozen films with MGM and received acclaim for many different roles, she is often best remembered for her portrayal of Dorothy Gale in \"The Wizard of Oz\" (1939). Garland was a frequent on-screen partner of both Mickey Rooney and Gene Kelly,", "id": "13593062" }, { "contents": "Louise LaPlanche\n\n\n, portraying a gypsy girl in \"The Hunchback of Notre Dame\" in 1923. Both LaPlanche began competing in California beauty pageants. In 1939, Louise LaPlanche was crowned Miss Catalina. Her Miss Catalina win led to a film contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). She appeared in the 1940 MGM musical film, \"Strike Up the Band\", which starred Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. LaPlanche later left MGM and signed on to Paramount Studios. She was cast in several Paramount films, including 1942's", "id": "3022959" }, { "contents": "Bonita Granville\n\n\nfilm success led to Granville reprising the role in three sequels from 1938 to 1939, including \"Nancy Drew... Reporter\" (1939). As a young adult, she was once again cast in supporting roles, often in prestigious films such as \"Now, Voyager\" (1942), as well as two Andy Hardy films with Mickey Rooney, \"Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble\" (1944) and \"Love Laughs at Andy Hardy\" (1946). She is also remembered for her starring role in the World", "id": "12873960" }, { "contents": "Eve Arden\n\n\nThis was followed by roles in the crime film \"The Forgotten Woman\" (1939), and the comedy \"At the Circus\" (1939), opposite Groucho Marx, a role that would require her to perform acrobatics. In 1940, she appeared opposite Clark Gable in \"Comrade X\", followed by the drama \"Manpower\" (1941), opposite Marlene Dietrich. She also appeared in a supporting part in the Red Skelton comedy \"Whistling in the Dark\" (1941), and the romantic comedy \"", "id": "10321268" }, { "contents": "Shirley Temple\n\n\nher departure from Twentieth Century-Fox, Shirley was signed by MGM for her comeback; the studio made plans to team her with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney for the Andy Hardy series. The idea was quickly abandoned. The next idea was teaming her with Garland and Rooney for the musical \"Babes on Broadway\". Fearing that either of the latter two could easily upstage Temple, MGM replaced her with Virginia Weidler. As a result, her only film for Metro was \"Kathleen\" in 1941, a story about an", "id": "7504264" }, { "contents": "Barbara Read\n\n\ncompany. When she failed to receive any roles because of her lack of experience, she joined the Laguna Beach Players theater, where she acted in a new play each month for two years. Her first film appearance was one of the three principal girls in the 1936 comedy film \"Three Smart Girls\", which also starred Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. From 1937 through 1939, Read appeared in nine films, most notably starring in \"The Spellbinder\", opposite Lee Tracy. From 1940 through 1948, she appeared in", "id": "5406875" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy\n\n\nLife Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland's character, Betsy Booth, is an aspiring singer and she sings in the first two of these films. However, although Garland songs were planned for the final film, they were eventually dropped. Unlike Garland-Rooney films outside of the \"Andy Hardy\" series, Rooney's Hardy character is not a musician, so Garland and Rooney do not perform together in the Hardy films. Rooney played the character continuously from age 16 to 25, when he appeared in", "id": "7714497" }, { "contents": "Fay Holden\n\n\nthe depression era. Eventually they left Vancouver and moved to Hollywood. Holden appeared in 46 motion pictures between 1935 and 1958, but is best known for her recurring role as Emily Hardy, mother of Mickey Rooney's character in the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" film series. The series was enormously popular in the late 1930s and early '40s, and Holden was in 15 of the 16 Hardy movies, surpassed only by Rooney, who was in all 16. Holden is also remembered for her performance as Hazel, the mother", "id": "15552902" }, { "contents": "Margaret Early\n\n\nBrent, Bette Davis, and Fay Bainter. She later became a freelance actress and found herself working in various roles at such studios as RKO, Warner Bros., and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her other screen roles include parts in \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939), \"Strike Up The Band\" (1940), \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" (1941), and \"Stage Door Canteen\" (1943). She made her last screen appearance in \"Cinderella Jones\" (1946)", "id": "11267109" }, { "contents": "Sheila Darcy\n\n\n1935 her career had taken off, and from then until 1941 she had roles in 41 films. In most of her early films, she played the heroine in B-movies, often Westerns. Darcy's best known roles were as the female lead in cliffhangers, such as the 1939 film \"Zorro's Fighting Legion\", in which she performed opposite Reed Hadley. She also played the Dragon Lady in the serial \"Terry and the Pirates\", released in 1940. In Westerns, she often played opposite popular cowboy", "id": "21067295" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nIn 1937, Rooney made his first film alongside Judy Garland with \"Thoroughbreds Don't Cry\". Garland and Rooney became close friends as they co-starred in future films and became a successful song-and-dance team. Audiences delighted in seeing the \"playful interactions between the two stars showcase a wonderful chemistry\". Along with three of the \"Andy Hardy\" films, where she portrayed a girl attracted to Andy, they appeared together in a string of successful musicals, including \"Babes in Arms\" (1939", "id": "5690267" }, { "contents": "Brenda Marshall\n\n\nArdis Ankerson (September 29, 1915 – July 30, 1992), known as Brenda Marshall, was a Filipino-born, American film actress. Marshall made her first film appearance in the 1939 \"Espionage Agent\". The following year, she played the leading lady to Errol Flynn in \"The Sea Hawk\". After divorcing actor Richard Gaines in 1940, she married William Holden in 1941, and her own career soon slowed. She starred opposite James Cagney in \"Captains of the Clouds\" (1942).", "id": "14392731" }, { "contents": "Julie Haydon\n\n\nmade by MGM. In 1932, she signed with RKO, and her first major role came that year in \"The Conquerors\", directed by William Wellman Her most notable performance came in 1935's \"The Scoundrel\" playing opposite Noël Coward, but, despite a new contract with MGM, only a few more films were to come in her short career, including \"A Family Affair\" (1937), the initial movie in the Andy Hardy series. Some have held that it was Haydon and not Fay Wray who", "id": "19690260" }, { "contents": "Jean Darling\n\n\nAssociation. She turned down an offer to appear alongside Mickey Rooney in one of the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" movies, and went on Broadway, making her debut in the musical \"Count Me In\" in 1942. Darling's stage career hit a real high when she landed the role of Carrie Pipperidge in the original Broadway production of \"Carousel\" in 1945. She appeared in 850 consecutive performances. Her role as Carrie Pipperidge helped her with parts for radio and TV in the 1950s. She hosted her own television show", "id": "1616169" }, { "contents": "List of Lana Turner performances\n\n\nLana Turner was an American actress who appeared in over fifty films during her career, which spanned four decades. Discovered in 1937 at age 16, she signed a contract with Warner Bros. and appeared in several films for the studio before signing a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The studio's co-founder, Louis B. Mayer, helped further her career by casting her in several youth-oriented comedies and musicals, including \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941),", "id": "7891475" }, { "contents": "Marguerite Chapman\n\n\ncontract to Warner Brothers in 1941, and then with Columbia from 1942 to 1948. She made her film debut in 1940, working for the next two years in small roles. In 1942, her big break came with Republic Pictures when she was cast in the leading female role in the twelve-part adventure film serial \"Spy Smasher\", a production that has been ranked among the best serials ever made. Chapman soon began receiving more leading roles and appeared opposite important stars such as Edward G. Robinson and George Sanders.", "id": "2722471" }, { "contents": "Jeanne Cagney\n\n\nRKO Pictures. However, she signed a long-term contract with Paramount Pictures. She appeared in 19 films between 1939 and 1965, including four films with her brother James: \"Yankee Doodle Dandy\" (1942), \"The Time of Your Life\" (1948), \"A Lion Is in the Streets\" (1953), and \"Man of a Thousand Faces\" (1957). Cagney gave a noted performance opposite Mickey Rooney in the film noir crime film \"Quicksand\" (1950). Cagney", "id": "6954933" }, { "contents": "Little Annie Rooney (1925 film)\n\n\nLittle Annie Rooney is a 1925 American silent comedy-drama film starring Mary Pickford and directed by William Beaudine. Pickford, one of the most successful actresses of the silent era, was best known throughout her career for her iconic portrayals of penniless young girls. After generating only modest box office revenue playing adults in her previous two films, Pickford wrote and produced \"Little Annie Rooney\" to cater to silent film audiences. Though she was 33 years old, Pickford played the title role, an Irish girl living in the slums", "id": "236551" }, { "contents": "Edith Barrett\n\n\n, she married leading man Vincent Price in 1938. The marriage ended in 1948. She and Price had one son, author/poet and environmental activist Vincent Barrett Price (born 1940). Her biggest Broadway success was as star of the now-obscure production \"Mrs. Moonlight\". In her first film, \"Ladies in Retirement\" (1941), she played one of the two half-witted half-sisters of Ida Lupino's homicidal character. Her best remembered movie role is possibly Mrs. Holland's mother-", "id": "18853813" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\nHardy film, \"A Family Affair\", in 1937. Mickey Rooney played Andy Hardy in the series, supported by Lewis Stone, Ann Rutherford, and Fay Holden. The movies were directed by George B. Seitz. Parker's character, Marion, appeared in most of the films, and her romances were a recurring feature of the series. Though she and the character she played were absent from the last two Andy Hardy films of the 1940s, Parker came out of retirement to play Marian Hardy in one more movie,", "id": "18919252" }, { "contents": "Nancy Walker\n\n\nrole provided Walker with her film debut when she signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to make a movie version, starring Lucille Ball (filmed in 1943). In 1943, she also appeared with Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in the second film version of \"Girl Crazy\". Her next film, \"Broadway Rhythm\", in which she had a featured musical number backed by Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra, \"Milkman, Keep Those Bottles Quiet\", ended Walker's contract with Metro. Her dry comic", "id": "9657966" }, { "contents": "List of Gloria Stuart performances\n\n\nstarred in two films opposite Shirley Temple: \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936), and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938), both for 20th Century Fox. She subsequently co-starred in \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939) opposite Don Ameche. Dissatisfied with her career in film, Stuart shifted her focus to stage acting. Between 1940 and 1942, Stuart appeared in numerous summer stock plays in New England, including a 1940 production of \"Our Town\" in which she starred alongside its playwright", "id": "19503931" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nBabes in Arms is the 1939 American film version of the 1937 Broadway musical of the same name. The film version stars Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland, and features Charles Winninger, Guy Kibbee, June Preisser, Grace Hayes, and Betty Jaynes. The film concerns a group of youngsters trying to put on a show to prove their vaudevillian parents wrong and make it to Broadway. The original Broadway script was significantly revamped, restructured, and rewritten to accommodate Hollywood's needs. In 1921, vaudeville performer Joe Moran (Winninger)", "id": "9219782" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nhim when he transferred to MGM in 1938. Turner attracted attention by playing the role of a murder victim in her first film, LeRoy's \"They Won't Forget\" (1937), and she later transitioned into featured roles, often appearing as an ingénue. During the early 1940s, Turner established herself as a leading actress and one of MGM's top performers, appearing in such films as the film noir \"Johnny Eager\" (1941); the musical \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941); the horror film", "id": "11929991" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nthe stature of most leading men. He appeared in a number of films, including \"Words and Music\" in 1948, which paired him for the last time with Garland on film (he appeared with her on one episode as a guest on \"The Judy Garland Show\"). He briefly starred in a CBS radio series, \"Shorty Bell\", in the summer of 1948, and reprised his role as \"Andy Hardy\", with most of the original cast, in a syndicated radio version of \"The", "id": "5690276" }, { "contents": "Donna Reed\n\n\nmany starlets at MGM, she played Mickey Rooney's love interest in an Andy Hardy film, in her case the hugely popular \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942). She was second billed in a children's film, \"Mokey\" (1942). Reed played a love interest in \"Calling Dr. Gillespie\" (1942) and \"Apache Trail\" (1942), then did a thriller with Edward Arnold, \"Eyes in the Night\" (1942), directed by Fred Zinnemann. Reed had", "id": "13840841" }, { "contents": "Evalyn Knapp\n\n\nHis Private Secretary\", a light comedy in which Wayne portrays a suit-and-tie wearing playboy determined to win her over. She also appeared in \"Corruption\" that year opposite Preston Foster. One of her better known film roles was opposite Ken Maynard in the 1934 film \"In Old Santa Fe\" featuring Gene Autry in his first screen appearance, in which he sang with a bluegrass band. She worked through 1941, but her career slowed afterward. In 1943, she played her last role, uncredited,", "id": "560741" }, { "contents": "Kathryn Grayson\n\n\nexercise. Within a year, Grayson had her first screen test. However, the studio executives were not satisfied, and she went through a further six months of lessons until she made her first film appearance in 1941's \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" as the character's secretary Kathryn Land. In the film, she takes part in three musical numbers. Two further films were planned for Grayson in 1941; \"White House Girl\", which was later made in 1948 with Durbin, and \"Very Warm for May", "id": "20045432" }, { "contents": "Susi Nicoletti\n\n\nSusi Nicoletti (3 September 1918 – 5 June 2005) was a Bavarian-born actress best remembered today for over 100 supporting roles mostly in comedy films. She was born as Susanne Emilie Luise Adele Habersack in Munich, but spent most of her childhood with her parents in Amsterdam. Back in Munich, she made her stage debut at age 13. Two years later she became a ballerina. In the early 1930s she turned to cabaret. In 1939, she was offered her first film role. In 1940 she moved to", "id": "6091110" }, { "contents": "Dorothy Morris\n\n\nShe did a screen test for the female lead in \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942), but lost to Donna Reed. Appearing in bit parts in several of the studio's more successful films, Morris was signed to a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract in 1941. For one of her early film roles, \"Cry 'Havoc'\" (1943), she affected a British accent. Her next picture was the well-received drama \"The Human Comedy\", which featured a star cast,", "id": "323808" }, { "contents": "The Courtship of Andy Hardy\n\n\nThe Courtship of Andy Hardy is a 1942 film, part of the Andy Hardy series. It gave an early role to Donna Reed although Mickey Rooney had lobbied for his then-wife Ava Gardner to have her part. Within a few months of the film's release, she filed for divorce. This was the 12th entry in the long-running \"Andy Hardy\" series of sixteen. When Carvel teenager and new tow truck-owner Andy Hardy is stopped by a policeman for driving without a license plate, a radio", "id": "20736523" }, { "contents": "Mae Busch\n\n\nMae Busch (18 June 1891 – 20 April 1946) was an Australian-born actress who worked in both silent and sound films in early Hollywood. In the latter part of her career she appeared in many Laurel and Hardy comedies, where she frequently played Hardy's shrewish wife. Mae Busch was born Annie May Busch in Melbourne, Victoria to popular Australian vaudeville performers Elizabeth Maria Lay and Frederick William Busch. Her mother had been active since 1883 under the stage names \"Dora Devere\" and then \"Dora Busch\";", "id": "10830566" }, { "contents": "Hannelore Schroth\n\n\ndebut at the age of nine in 1931's Max Ophüls' comedy \"Dann schon lieber Lebertran\" opposite her mother. Until age sixteen she attended drama school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Her early film successes include \"Spiel im Sommerwind\" (1938), \"Weisser Flieder\" (1939) and \"Kitty und die Weltkonferenz\" (1939) - the latter of which was her first leading role. During World War II, Hannelore Schroth continued performing in films. Unlike her father, Heinrich Schroth, who was by", "id": "16153872" }, { "contents": "Lupe Vélez\n\n\npopular actress, RKO Pictures did not renew her contract in 1934. Over the next few years, Vélez worked for various studio as a freelance actress; she also spent two years in England where she filmed \"The Morals of Marcus\" and \"Gypsy Melody\" (both 1936). She returned to Los Angeles the following year where she appeared in the final part of the Wheeler & Woolsey comedy \"High Flyers\" (1937). Vélez made her final appearance on Broadway in the 1938 musical \"You Never Know\"", "id": "20716058" }, { "contents": "Katharine Kavanaugh\n\n\nher biggest claims to fame was helping to create the Jones Family characters, who would appear in 17 low-budget films between 1936 and 1940. The first film in the series, \"Every Saturday Night\", was released in 1936, and Kavanaugh would also co-write \"Educating Father\", released later that same year. While her screenwriting career cooled in the late 1930s, she continued writing plays that were produced in the Los Angeles area until her death in 1942. She and her husband, Oliver Ziegfeld (", "id": "21036559" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\n, including \"The Wizard of Oz\" and \"Babes in Arms\". She was the fourth person to receive the award as well as only one of twelve in history to ever be presented with one. Garland starred in three films released in 1940: \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\", \"Strike Up the Band\", and \"Little Nellie Kelly\". In the last, she played her first adult role, a dual role of both mother and daughter. \"Little Nellie Kelly\" was purchased from George M.", "id": "13593089" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nliving on her own. In late 1949 Hardi and her husband moved to Jakarta. Two years later she made her feature film debut in a bit role in the Produksi Film Negara (PFN; State Film Corporation)'s \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". The following year she took a starring role in another PFN film, \"Si Pintjang\", portraying an old woman; as she was only twenty-four, she was artificially aged with make-up. That same year she appeared as the lead love interest in", "id": "15623084" }, { "contents": "Jane Frazee\n\n\nB film \"Melody and Moonlight\" (1940) for Republic Pictures. Shortly after the film's release she was signed by Universal Pictures and was featured in \"Buck Privates\", the high-grossing 1941 comedy/World War II film starring Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The strong impression she made in that film elevated her to leading-lady roles in Universal's popular \"B\" musicals, usually appearing opposite Robert Paige. She left Universal in late 1942, when she married actor-director Glenn Tryon, who", "id": "11708629" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\n\n\nAndy Hardy Meets Debutante is a 1940 American romantic comedy film directed by George B. Seitz. The film stars Lewis Stone, Mickey Rooney, Cecilia Parker, Fay Holden and Judy Garland. It is the ninth of the \"Andy Hardy\" full-length film series. Andy Hardy (Mickey Rooney) from Carvel becomes infatuated with a well-known young socialite, Daphne Fowler (Diana Lewis), from New York City. Even though he hasn’t met the woman in person, he drops her name to his friends and", "id": "11382757" }, { "contents": "Martha Vickers\n\n\nplayed minor roles in several films during the early 1940s, working first at Universal Studios and then at RKO Pictures. She next went to Warner Bros., where \"they gave her the star push, rearranging her surname to 'Vickers.'\" Her work there included the role of Carmen Sternwood, the promiscuous, drug-addicted younger sister of Lauren Bacall's character in \"The Big Sleep\" (1946). She also starred in a musical, \"The Time, the Place and the Girl\", followed by", "id": "721594" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nwas over, she was summoned back to work and ultimately performed two songs as a guest in the Rodgers and Hart biopic \"Words and Music\" (1948), which was her last appearance with Mickey Rooney. Despite the all-star cast, \"Words and Music\" barely broke even at the box office. Having regained her strength, as well as some needed weight during her suspension, Garland felt much better and in the fall of 1948, she returned to MGM to replace a pregnant June Allyson for the musical", "id": "13593101" }, { "contents": "Martha O'Driscoll\n\n\n's Dangerous\" (1937), she was not credited by name. In the Deanna Durbin vehicle \"Mad About Music\" (1937), she was billed as \"pretty girl.\" Her face appeared on such advertisements as Charm-Kurl Supreme Cold Wave and Max Factor Hollywood Face Powder. Universal lent O'Driscoll to MGM for parts in \"The Secret of Dr Kildare\" (1939) and \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1940), starring Mickey Rooney. RKO, however, gave O'Driscoll her first two starring", "id": "20196774" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nMarlia Hardi (also Marlia Hardy; 10 March 192718 June 1984) was an Indonesian film actress active from 1951 to 1983. Born in the Central Javan city of Magelang, she took to the stage in the 1940s before moving to Jakarta in 1949. Two years later she made her feature film debut in \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". Over the next two decades she appeared in over seventy films, became recognized for her depictions of mothers, and received the Citra Award for Best Supporting Actress. Despite her productiveness, however", "id": "15623082" }, { "contents": "Susan Peters\n\n\nLos Angeles. After completing filming of the comedy \"Andy Hardy's Double Life\" (1942) in which she had a lead role, Mervyn LeRoy cast Peters in the drama \"Random Harvest\", in which she portrayed a young woman who falls in love with her step-uncle. The film was one of the top 25 highest-earning films of the year, and Peters's performance garnered her critical acclaim, earning her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. The success of \"Random Harvest\" led", "id": "17519590" }, { "contents": "Paulette Goddard\n\n\nshe appeared as an uncredited extra in two films, the Laurel and Hardy short film \"Berth Marks\" (1929), and George Fitzmaurice's drama \"The Locked Door\" (1929). Following her divorce, she briefly visited Europe before returning to Hollywood in late 1930 with her mother. Her second attempt at acting was no more successful than the first, as she landed work only as an extra. In 1930, she signed her first film contract with producer Samuel Goldwyn to appear as a Goldwyn Girl in \"", "id": "3980436" }, { "contents": "Trixie Friganza\n\n\nTrixie Friganza (born Delia O'Callaghan; November 29, 1870 – February 27, 1955) began her career as an operetta soubrette, working her way from the chorus to starring in musical comedies to having her own feature act on the vaudeville circuit. She transitioned to film in the early 1920s mostly playing small characters that were quirky and comedic and retired from the stage in 1940 due to health concerns. She spent her last years teaching drama to young women in a convent school and when she died she left everything to the convent", "id": "13928014" }, { "contents": "Susan Hayward\n\n\nSusan Hayward (born Edythe Marrenner; June 30, 1917 – March 14, 1975) was an American actress and model. After working as a fashion model, Hayward traveled to Hollywood in 1937. She secured a film contract and played several small supporting roles over the next few years. By the late 1940s, the quality of her film roles had improved, and she achieved recognition for her dramatic abilities with the first of five Academy Award nominations for Best Actress for her performance as an alcoholic in \"Smash-Up,", "id": "14143916" }, { "contents": "Nella Walker\n\n\nyear to 1938, she had 23 film appearances. Her biggest film appearance during this period was in \"Young Dr. Kildare\" with Lionel Barrymore and Lew Ayres. Throughout the 1930s, her career was strong, and despite never being a premier star, she repeatedly had solid acting roles. She finished the decade strongly in 1939 with nine film roles, only three of which were uncredited. The 1940s mirrored her success of the previous decade in many ways, with appearances in 37 films from 1940 to 1947. Later in her", "id": "4686869" }, { "contents": "May Wallace\n\n\nMay Wallace (August 23, 1877 – December 11, 1938) was an American film actress. She appeared in 63 films between 1914 and 1939. Wallace was born in Russiaville, Indiana and died in Los Angeles, California, where she worked in Hollywood as a film actress. She often played supporting roles for producer Hal Roach in his Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang comedies, mostly in maternal roles. Wallace was married to Thomas W. Maddox until her death, they had one daughter and one son. She died of", "id": "9169980" }, { "contents": "Ora Carew\n\n\na film editor. Ora's birth year has been listed as 1893, on her death certificate and is also what her grave says, but Utah birth index and the 1900 census indicate 1891. She was educated by private tutors and at Roland Hall Seminary. After her father died on June 19, 1896, her mother moved with her three children to California. Her screen career began with MGM, following numerous engagements in vaudeville, musical comedy and stock. Some of her most notable films with MGM were \"Go West,", "id": "19207733" }, { "contents": "Eilene Janssen\n\n\nMary Eilene Janssen (born May 25, 1938), is a retired American film and television actress. Eilene Janssen was born in Los Angeles, California on May 25, 1938, to parents Henry Janssen and Mary Ellen Thompson. She began her film career as a child actress in the early 1940s. With her father being a longtime worker for Universal Studios, Eilene Janssen made her first screen appearance in the 1940 film \"Sandy Gets Her Man\". She continued to have bit parts in several movies such as \"Two", "id": "12362318" }, { "contents": "Ann Rutherford\n\n\nLouis Mayer originally refused the loan because he considered the role too minor, but Rutherford passionately appealed to him to change his mind. In December 1939, while promoting the new movie, Rutherford visited six Confederate Army veterans at the Confederate Soldiers Home near Atlanta. One of the veterans gave Rutherford a rose corsage tied with Confederate colors. From 1937 until 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. Her first film in this series was \"You're Only Young Once\"", "id": "6472820" }, { "contents": "Gloria Stuart\n\n\nMan\" (1933), followed by roles in the Shirley Temple musicals \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936) and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938). She also starred as Queen Anne in the musical comedy \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939). Beginning in 1940, Stuart slowed her film career, instead performing in regional theater in New England. In 1945, following a tenure as a contract player for Twentieth Century Fox, Stuart abandoned her acting career and shifted to a career as an artist", "id": "3454792" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nand Judy Garland in the Andy Hardy film \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938). During the shoot, Turner completed her studies with an educational social worker, allowing her to graduate high school that year. The film was a box-office success, and her appearance in it as a flirtatious high school student convinced studio head Louis B. Mayer that Turner could be the next Jean Harlow, a sex symbol who had died six months before Turner's arrival at MGM. Mayer helped further Turner's career by giving her", "id": "11930007" }, { "contents": "Linda Darnell\n\n\nLinda Darnell (born Monetta Eloyse Darnell, October 16, 1923April 10, 1965) was an American film actress. Darnell progressed from modeling as a child to acting in theater and film. At the encouragement of her mother, she made her first film in 1939, and appeared in supporting roles in big-budget films for 20th Century Fox throughout the 1940s. She rose to fame with co-starring roles opposite Tyrone Power in adventure films, and established a main character career after her role in \"Forever Amber\" (", "id": "9752181" }, { "contents": "Marcia Mae Jones\n\n\nsigned her to co-star with Jackie Moran in a few rustic romances; when this series lapsed, both Jones and Moran joined Monogram's popular action-comedy series starring Frankie Darro. As a young adult, she continued to work in motion pictures, notably in \"Nine Girls\" (1944) and \"Arson, Inc.\" (1948). Like many familiar faces of the 1940s, she appeared on numerous television programs. In 1951 she appeared as comic foil to Buster Keaton in Keaton's filmed TV series.", "id": "5963847" }, { "contents": "Peggy Drake\n\n\nPeggy Drake (6 October 1922 – 19 September 2014), was an Austrian film and television actress. She primarily appeared in B-movies of the 1940s. Born Lieselotte Mayer in Vienna, Austria, she moved to the United States with her family at the age of three. Her acting career started with an uncredited role in the film \"Too Many Girls\" (1940). Her career was short-lived, appearing in five films between 1940 and 1942, most notably in the serial film \"King of the", "id": "8901594" }, { "contents": "Signe Hasso\n\n\nfilm in Sweden. In 1933, she made her first film, \"Tystnadens hus\", with German film director/cameraman Harry Hasso, whom she married the same year. They had a son by the time she was 19. They divorced in 1941. In 1940, she moved to the United States, where she signed a contract with RKO Pictures, who promoted her as \"the next Garbo\". With few RKO roles forthcoming, she turned to the stage to make a living. According to the Internet Broadway", "id": "19347089" }, { "contents": "Rita La Roy\n\n\nand the \"cobra dance\" in which her feet and legs were tied together under a stylized snakeskin so that she danced by undulating her torso.\" In 1929, she made her film debut in \"The Delightful Rogue\", starring opposite matinee idol Rod La Rocque. Over the next several years, working as part of the RKO Radio Pictures stable, she appeared in both starring and supporting roles. While her final significant role was in the 1940 comedy-mystery \"Hold That Woman!\", she had several small", "id": "13534727" }, { "contents": "Elizabeth Taylor\n\n\nto socially prominent American parents, Taylor moved with her family to Los Angeles in 1939. She made her acting debut in a minor role in the Universal Pictures film \"There's One Born Every Minute\" (1942) but the studio ended her contract after a year. She was then signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and became a popular teen star after appearing in \"National Velvet\" (1944). She transitioned to more mature roles in the 1950s, when she starred in the comedy \"Father of the", "id": "19979789" }, { "contents": "Karin Booth\n\n\nKarin Booth (born June Francis Hoffman, June 19, 1916 – July 27, 2003) was an American film and TV actress of the 1940s to 1960s. She was born June Francis Hoffman on June 19, 1916, in Minneapolis, Minnesota to Francis T. and Ebba V. Hoffman. She lived in Portland and Los Angeles, attending John Marshall High School. She began her career modeling and being a chorus girl in 1939 and was signed under contract to Paramount Pictures in 1941 under the name Katharine Booth. After changing her", "id": "1386964" }, { "contents": "Saranya Ponvannan\n\n\ndebut in Mani Ratnam's production \"Nayakan,\" as the female lead opposite Kamal Haasan in 1987. She made her first Telugu appearance in 1988 film \"Neerajanam;\" her Malayalam debut was a year later in the 1989 film \"Artham\" starring opposite Mamooty. In 1996 almost during the end of her career as a lead actress she debuted in Kannada cinema in \"Appaji\". After marriage in 1995, she semi retired from acting. In 2000 she appeared playing the lead role in the comedy television series, \"", "id": "2557700" }, { "contents": "Franciska Gaal\n\n\n\", opposite Fredric March. She followed this with the comedy \"The Girl Downstairs\" (1938) with Franchot Tone, a remake of her Austrian success \"Catherine the Last\". In 1939, Gaal co-starred with Bing Crosby in the musical \"Paris Honeymoon\". She returned to Hungary in 1940 because of her mother's illness and remained there for the duration of World War II. In 1946, she began work on a new film in Budapest the Soviet-backed \"Renee XIV\" but filming was", "id": "19308441" }, { "contents": "Jo Ann Sayers\n\n\nstudent production and invited her to Hollywood for a screen test. She was offered a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her first credited film role was in 1938. In 1940, she was selected for the titular role in the Broadway production of \"My Sister Eileen\", opposite Shirley Booth, who was two decades Sayers' senior, which opened on December 26, 1940. She remained in the Broadway cast until June 1942, when she left to marry Anthony A. Bliss (1913-1991), a New", "id": "6389492" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nstar Baby Rosalie Essex (June Preisser), but Mickey gets in a fight with Jeff. Mickey tells Judge Black that his parents' show flopped. The judge gives Mickey 30 days to pay damages. Don and Molly sing \"Where or When\" with an orchestra of children. Mickey has a date with Baby and dines in her house. Mickey wants Baby in the show, which needs $287. She offers to pay it. Mickey smokes a cigar and leaves sick. Mickey tells Patsy that Baby has to play", "id": "9219785" }, { "contents": "Chela Ruiz\n\n\nChela Ruiz (5 June 1921 - 1 December 1999) was an Argentine actress. Her career spanned radio, film, television and stage, and in 1997 the Argentine Association of Actors awarded her the prestigious Premio Podestá for her theatrical work. Ruiz made her professional debut on Radio Splendid, along with her sister Nora Cullen, working as an actress and reader. In the 1940s and 1950s she was known for her narration of radio plays by Nené Cascallar. She began appearing on stage in 1942. A film career followed later", "id": "10450238" }, { "contents": "Petula Clark\n\n\nher film career in the late 1960s, starring in two big musical films. In \"Finian's Rainbow\" (1968), she starred opposite Fred Astaire and she was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for her performance. With her role, she again made history by becoming Astaire's final on-screen dance partner. The following year she was cast with Peter O'Toole in \"Goodbye, Mr. Chips\" (1969), a musical adaptation of the classic James Hilton novella", "id": "19868394" }, { "contents": "Sara Haden\n\n\n\". Haden later became a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract player in the late 1930s and had smallish roles in many of the studio's films, most notably in the Andy Hardy series starring Mickey Rooney, cast as the spinsterish Aunt Milly Forrest. Haden made her last film, \"Andy Hardy Comes Home\", in 1958, but was active on television until a 1965 guest spot on \"Dr. Kildare\". She was most notable for her stern, humorless characterisations such as a truant officer in Shirley Temple's \"", "id": "16961173" }, { "contents": "Rafaela Ottiano\n\n\n's last film was the musical comedy \"I Married an Angel\" (1942), starring Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. During her career in film, she appeared in approximately 45 motion pictures, opposite such actors as Barbara Stanwyck, Conrad Nagel, Peter Lorre, Zasu Pitts, and Katharine Hepburn. Ottiano lived in the Times Square area during the Prohibition Era and never married. She died in 1942, in the Boston home of her late parents, of intestinal cancer at the age of 54. She is buried at", "id": "9444719" }, { "contents": "Doris Davenport\n\n\nDoris Davenport, also known as Doris Jordan (January 1, 1917 – June 18, 1980) was an American film actress during the 1930s and early 1940s. Davenport was born in Moline, Illinois, but raised in Hollywood, California. She started auditioning for acting roles, and performed in her first film in 1934, titled \"Kid Millions\". From 1934 to 1939, she appeared in only five films, supporting herself by working in New York City as a fashion model between films. However, when she auditioned", "id": "2801211" }, { "contents": "Patricia Dane\n\n\nPatricia Dane (born Thelma Pearl Pippins, August 4, 1919 – June 5, 1995) was an American film actress of the 1940s. Dane was born Thelma Pearl Pippins in Blountstown, Florida and was also known as Thelma Byrnes after her stepfather. She began her career designing clothes for a New York City dress firm and was signed to an MGM contract in 1941. Dane's earliest appearances were two uncredited roles in \"Ziegfeld Girl\" and \"I'll Wait for You\" (both 1941). She played the", "id": "18013995" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\na young girl. Her new contract called for a starting salary of $75 a week and scales up to $1000 a week for the seventh year. In November 1935, Parker purchased a new home in Beverly Hills, California. The following year she joined the ballet school of Dave Gould at MGM, along with Maureen O'Sullivan. By the fall of 1936, Parker was studying singing. She played Marian Hardy in the extremely popular Andy Hardy film series in the late 1930s and early 1940s. She was in the original", "id": "18919251" }, { "contents": "Rooney Mara\n\n\nwas always afraid that I might fail.\" Her first and only role in high school was Juliet in \"Romeo and Juliet\", which she got after being signed up to audition by a friend. Mara acted in a few student films while at NYU, and then began her career in acting, first auditioning at the age of nineteen. Mara first appeared as an extra in films which starred her sister, including a bit-part in the 2005 direct-to-video horror film \"\". She found work", "id": "18311311" }, { "contents": "Georgiana Young\n\n\nBelzer and Gladys Royal. Along with her half-sisters, she was raised Roman Catholic. Young's acting career was short-lived, though she appeared in three films. Her debut role was as Berta Hubbard, sister of Mabel Gardiner Hubbard, in Irving Cummings's 1939 biographical film \"The Story of Alexander Graham Bell\", opposite her sisters Loretta (as Mabel), Sally, and Polly Ann. She would later have bit parts in two other films: \"No, No, Nanette\" (1940)", "id": "6269969" }, { "contents": "Glikeriya Bogdanova-Chesnokova\n\n\nmedals for her service. Following the war, in 1946, Bogdanova-Chesnokova returned to the Leningrad State Theatre of Musical Comedy. In 1947, she received the Stalin Prize. In the mid 1950s, Bogdanova-Chesnokova performed during three circus seasons with the clown, The act involved acrobatic actions. In 1955, Bogdanova-Chesnokova made her first significant film appearance. She played Maria Mikhailovna in the comedy film \"Tamer of Tigers\". Generally, Bogdanova-Chesnokova was a character actress taking supporting roles. However, in", "id": "5458931" }, { "contents": "Judi West\n\n\nJudi West (born December 15, 1942) is an American actress, best known for her supporting role opposite Jack Lemmon in the 1966 comedy film \"The Fortune Cookie. Judi West acted in a few films in the 1960s and also appeared in television in the 1960s through the early 1980s. Her notable film appearances include: She had earlier worked on the Broadway stage including \"A Family Affair\" (1962) and \"She Loves Me\" (1963-1964). Married from 1971 to 1989 to actor John Rubinstein", "id": "5957659" }, { "contents": "Judy Holliday\n\n\nJudy Holliday (born Judith Tuvim, June 21, 1921 – June 7, 1965) was an American actress, comedian, and singer. She began her career as part of a nightclub act before working in Broadway plays and musicals. Her success in the 1946 stage production of \"Born Yesterday\" as Billie Dawn led to her being cast in the 1950 film version for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. She appeared in several films", "id": "15453399" }, { "contents": "Elena Lucena\n\n\nMaría Elena Lucena Arcuri (25 September 1914 – 7 October 2015) was an Argentine film actress of the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema (1940–60). She began her career in radio in the 1930s and reached her greatest success with the role of \"Chimbela\", which was later depicted in film, theater and television. Her extensive film career includes approximately 50 films, including notable performances in \"Chimbela\" (1939) and \"Una noche cualquiera\" (1951). During the 1940s she participated in films with comedians", "id": "16119436" }, { "contents": "Florence Nash\n\n\nLynch in \"Within the Law\". She was a noted theater actor and comedian in vaudeville until the 1930s (appearing in sketches including \"In 1999\"), when she moved to Hollywood to try her luck with films. Her most notable role was as \"Nancy Blake\" in the 1939 MGM blockbuster \"The Women\". She also was the author of a book of verse, \"June Dusk\", published in 1918. After her retirement from acting in 1939, she spent the next decade living comfortably in", "id": "6401074" }, { "contents": "Doris Nolan\n\n\nher jitters, the show was a success and Nolan got positive reviews. When Nolan left the play, Woods sent her back to Hollywood, getting her a contract with Universal Pictures. She continued to move back and forth between movies and theater throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Her most prominent film appearance was in the 1938 version of \"Holiday\", where she played alongside Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Her subsequent film roles went downhill, but she reinvigorated her Broadway career with an 18-month stint in \"The Doughgirls\",", "id": "14779965" }, { "contents": "Marjorie Stapp\n\n\nMarjorie Stapp (September 17, 1921 – June 2, 2014), was an American actress who was mainly in low-budget pictures. Stapp began her film career when she signed a contract with the film studio 20th Century-Fox in the 1940s. Her first screen appearance was in \"The Kid from Brooklyn\", a 1946 film starring Danny Kaye. This was followed by another minor appearance in \"Linda, Be Good\" (1947). Eventually, she landed a leading role in the Western movie \"The", "id": "3140505" }, { "contents": "Roshini (actress)\n\n\nRoshini is an Indian film actress who has worked in the Telugu and Tamil film industries. She is the younger sister actress Jyothika and half sister to Nagma. After getting a recommendation by her sister Nagma, Roshini made her acting debut in Selva's comedy film \"Sishya\", where she played the lead role alongside Karthik. She subsequently starred in \"Master\" (1997), opposite Chiranjeevi. Roshini was keen to accept performance-orientated roles and turned down several offers in late 1997 to be a part of films in", "id": "12724581" }, { "contents": "Lola Albright\n\n\nmotion picture debut with a small singing role in the 1947 musical comedy \"The Unfinished Dance\" and then appeared the following year in two Judy Garland movies: \"The Pirate\" and \"Easter Parade\". She first gained studio and public notice in the 1949 film noir production \"Champion\" with her portrayal of the wife of a manipulative boxing manager; she falls for a prizefighter played by Kirk Douglas. For the next several years, she appeared in secondary roles in over 20 films, including several B westerns. Among", "id": "18089616" }, { "contents": "Marika Rökk\n\n\nthe 1930s and 1940s. She had the technical skill and glamour to carry off the formulaic plots and dialogue and provide German audiences with a home grown star to rival the popular American actresses. \"Der Bettelstudent\" and \"Gasparone\", followed by \"Hello Janine!\" in 1939, all starred her together with Johannes Heesters and established them as the \"dream couple\" of the musical comedy genre. In her appearances she cultivated her \"magyar\" accent conveying a notion of \"paprika\" exoticism. Her films, which", "id": "9061566" }, { "contents": "Fay Wray\n\n\nShe continued to star in various films, including \"The Richest Girl in the World\", a second film with Joel McCrea, but by the early 1940s, her appearances became less frequent. She retired from acting in 1942 after her second marriage but due to financial exigencies soon resumed her acting career, and over the next three decades, Wray appeared in several films and also frequently on television. Wray was cast in the 1953-54 ABC situation comedy \"The Pride of the Family\" as Catherine Morrison. Paul Hartman", "id": "10781506" }, { "contents": "Margaret O'Brien\n\n\n(1944), opposite Judy Garland. As Tootie Smith, the feisty but fragile little sister of Judy Garland, she was a bright point in a very good film, especially in her musical numbers with Garland and during a Halloween sequence in which she confronts a grouchy neighbor. For her performance, she was awarded a special juvenile Oscar in 1944. Margaret and June Allyson were known as \"The Town Criers\" of MGM. \"We were always in competition: I wanted to cry better than June, and June wanted", "id": "7504217" }, { "contents": "Ann Sothern\n\n\nSothern appeared in two musical films in 1948, \"April Showers\" opposite Jack Carson and \"Words and Music\" starring an all-star cast of MGM actors, singers and dancers. In 1949, she appeared in the Academy Award-winning film \"A Letter to Three Wives\" for 20th Century Fox. Sothern received excellent reviews for her performance but the acclaim failed to stimulate her career, which had begun to wane in the late 1940s. In 1949, Sothern contracted hepatitis which she would battle for the next three", "id": "2026182" }, { "contents": "Jane Isbell\n\n\nWar soldier who once saved the life of Andrew Jackson. Clark Isbell's father was also a cousin of Alabama Governor William J. Samford. The Isbells moved to Los Angeles when Jane was an infant. The elder of two sisters, she began modeling and appearing as an extra in films when only four years old. In 1932, she made her first Mickey McGuire comedy starring Mickey Rooney and would eventually make five films in the Mickey McGuire series, similar to the Our Gang films. She grew up with child stars for playmates", "id": "12640286" }, { "contents": "Shirley Palmer (actress)\n\n\n1930 she appeared with Dorothy Sebastian and Neil Hamilton in \"Ladies Must Play\", her only film of that year. In 1932 she appeared in \"This Sporting Age\", and in 1933 she starred in probably her most recognizable role, starring opposite John Wayne in \"Somewhere in Sonora\". It would be her last credited role. She had two uncredited roles following that film, one the same year and the other in 1934, after which her career ended. She married once, to writer John Collier, and", "id": "3797930" }, { "contents": "Betty Grable\n\n\n(1930), starring Eddie Cantor. Although she received no on-screen credit for her performance, she led the film's opening musical number, entitled \"Cowboys\". In 1932, she signed a contract with RKO Radio Pictures, and she was assigned to a succession of acting, singing, and dancing classes at the studio's drama school. Her first film for the studio, \"Probation\" (1932), provided the 14-year-old Grable with her first credited screen role. Over the next few years", "id": "17559458" }, { "contents": "Erika Jayne\n\n\n, and pink.\" Soon after she gave birth to a son, Thomas Zizzo, Jr. After the couple divorced a few years later, she relocated to Los Angeles to pursue her dream of becoming a singer and performer. Early in her career, Girardi worked as a waitress to support herself between acting jobs. Girardi began her acting career in the early 1990s by appearing in small roles in several American television series and films. Her first on-screen appearance was a role as Suzanne Morton in the episode \"Prescription for", "id": "22006264" }, { "contents": "Thelma Scott\n\n\nThelma Scott (17 June 1913 – 23 November 2006) was an Australian character actress and television director whose 70-year career in theatre, radio, film and Australian television made her one of her country's most recognizable and beloved personalities. Having started her career in the early 1930s in theatre and film productions, she became one of the nation's biggest radio performers, during the 1940s featuring in productions such as \"Big Sister\" and \"Blue Hills\". She returned to made for TV films in the early late 1950s and", "id": "7852633" } ]
June Preisser ( June 26 , 1920 -- September 19 , 1984 ) was an American actress , briefly popular in musical films during the late 1930s and early 1940s , many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat . Born in New Orleans , Louisiana , Preisser was one of six children , and was an underweight baby . Her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age , in an attempt to build her strength . There she , and her sister Cherry , learnt acrobatics . Their mother was keen to have them follow a career in showbusiness , especially when their father died suddenly , leaving the family with few options to make a living . When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home , and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville , and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936 . The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States , and also performed in Europe , most notably for . Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage , and June was signed to a film contract by . Her first film Dancing Co-Ed ( 1939 ) provided only a small part , but her next film , Babes in Arms ( 1939 ) , gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland . She performed with Rooney and Garland again in Strike Up the Band ( 1940 ) , and with Rooney in two " Andy Hardy " films , Judge Hardy and Son ( 1939 ) and Andy Hardy 's Private Secretary ( 1941 ) . Gallant Sons ( 1940 ) placed her in a comedic murder mystery , and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in ( 1941 ) , and followed this with Sweater Girl ( 1942 ) , opposite Eddie Bracken . She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry , and the birth of a son , Ricky . By this time , MGM had little interest in promoting her , and she left to work for [START_ENT] Monogram Pictures [END_ENT] . She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years , and played the character " Dodie Rogers " in seven " high school " comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948 . Her final film was ( 1948 ) , and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of Annie Get Your Gun
829a1318-ee8e-4a10-8bc1-5304bc19b686_June_Preisse:12
[{"answer": "Monogram Pictures", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "1588593", "title": "Monogram Pictures"}]}]
[ { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n, and June was signed to a film contract by MGM. Her first film, \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), provided only a small part, but her next film, \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. She performed with Rooney and Garland again in \"Strike Up the Band\" (1940), and with Rooney in two \"Andy Hardy\" films, \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939) and \"Andy Hardy", "id": "17067760" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nJune Preisser (June 26, 1920 – September 19, 1984) was an American actress, popular in musical films during the late 1930s and through the 1940s, many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat. Born in New Orleans, Preisser was one of six children. An underweight child, her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age, in an attempt to build her strength. There she, and her sister Cherry, learned acrobatics. Their mother was keen to have them follow a career", "id": "17067758" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n's Private Secretary\" (1941). \"Gallant Sons\" (1940) placed her in a comedic murder mystery, and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in \"Henry Aldrich for President\" (1941), and followed this with \"Sweater Girl\" (1942), opposite Eddie Bracken. She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry, and the birth of a son, Ricky. By this time, MGM had little interest in promoting her, and she left to work", "id": "17067761" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nfor Monogram Pictures. She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years, and played the character \"Dodie Rogers\" in seven \"high school\" comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948. Her final film was Music Man (1948), and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of \"Annie Get Your Gun\", she retired from acting. She divorced not long after, and taught dancing and acrobatics in Los Angeles, before moving with her son to Florida. They", "id": "17067762" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nin show business, especially when their father died suddenly, leaving the family with few options to make a living. When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home, and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville, and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936. The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States, and also performed in Europe, most notably for George VI of the United Kingdom. Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage", "id": "17067759" }, { "contents": "Melody Trail\n\n\nand Prejudice\" (1940). In 1939, she played the role of Carreen O'Hara, the sister of Scarlet O'Hara, in the film \"Gone with the Wind\". From 1937 to 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. She retired from films in 1950. Rutherford died on June 11, 2012 at her home in Beverly Hills, California. \"Melody Trail\" was filmed August 21–27, 1935. The film had an operating budget of $15,075", "id": "2111015" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nHardy Family movies as a literal girl-next-door to Rooney's character Andy Hardy, in \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938), although Hardy's love interest was played by Lana Turner. They teamed as lead characters for the first time in \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), ultimately appearing in five additional films, including Hardy films \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\" (1940) and \"Life Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland stated that she, Rooney, and other young", "id": "13593082" }, { "contents": "Annie Get Your Gun (film)\n\n\n, MGM's biggest musical comedy star, was originally cast as Annie Oakley. She recorded all her songs for the soundtrack and worked for two months under the direction of Busby Berkeley and dance director Robert Alton. Berkeley and Garland had worked together previously in the late 1930s and early 1940s in a successful series of backstage musicals teaming her with fellow juvenile star Mickey Rooney. Berkeley had been fired from the Garland/Rooney musical \"Girl Crazy\" in 1943 due to personality clashes with musical director Roger Edens and for driving Garland very", "id": "13779025" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nYear for her live recording \"Judy at Carnegie Hall\" (1961). Garland began performing in vaudeville as a child with her two older sisters, and was later signed to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a teenager. Although she appeared in more than two dozen films with MGM and received acclaim for many different roles, she is often best remembered for her portrayal of Dorothy Gale in \"The Wizard of Oz\" (1939). Garland was a frequent on-screen partner of both Mickey Rooney and Gene Kelly,", "id": "13593062" }, { "contents": "Louise LaPlanche\n\n\n, portraying a gypsy girl in \"The Hunchback of Notre Dame\" in 1923. Both LaPlanche began competing in California beauty pageants. In 1939, Louise LaPlanche was crowned Miss Catalina. Her Miss Catalina win led to a film contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). She appeared in the 1940 MGM musical film, \"Strike Up the Band\", which starred Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. LaPlanche later left MGM and signed on to Paramount Studios. She was cast in several Paramount films, including 1942's", "id": "3022959" }, { "contents": "Bonita Granville\n\n\nfilm success led to Granville reprising the role in three sequels from 1938 to 1939, including \"Nancy Drew... Reporter\" (1939). As a young adult, she was once again cast in supporting roles, often in prestigious films such as \"Now, Voyager\" (1942), as well as two Andy Hardy films with Mickey Rooney, \"Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble\" (1944) and \"Love Laughs at Andy Hardy\" (1946). She is also remembered for her starring role in the World", "id": "12873960" }, { "contents": "Eve Arden\n\n\nThis was followed by roles in the crime film \"The Forgotten Woman\" (1939), and the comedy \"At the Circus\" (1939), opposite Groucho Marx, a role that would require her to perform acrobatics. In 1940, she appeared opposite Clark Gable in \"Comrade X\", followed by the drama \"Manpower\" (1941), opposite Marlene Dietrich. She also appeared in a supporting part in the Red Skelton comedy \"Whistling in the Dark\" (1941), and the romantic comedy \"", "id": "10321268" }, { "contents": "Shirley Temple\n\n\nher departure from Twentieth Century-Fox, Shirley was signed by MGM for her comeback; the studio made plans to team her with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney for the Andy Hardy series. The idea was quickly abandoned. The next idea was teaming her with Garland and Rooney for the musical \"Babes on Broadway\". Fearing that either of the latter two could easily upstage Temple, MGM replaced her with Virginia Weidler. As a result, her only film for Metro was \"Kathleen\" in 1941, a story about an", "id": "7504264" }, { "contents": "Barbara Read\n\n\ncompany. When she failed to receive any roles because of her lack of experience, she joined the Laguna Beach Players theater, where she acted in a new play each month for two years. Her first film appearance was one of the three principal girls in the 1936 comedy film \"Three Smart Girls\", which also starred Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. From 1937 through 1939, Read appeared in nine films, most notably starring in \"The Spellbinder\", opposite Lee Tracy. From 1940 through 1948, she appeared in", "id": "5406875" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy\n\n\nLife Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland's character, Betsy Booth, is an aspiring singer and she sings in the first two of these films. However, although Garland songs were planned for the final film, they were eventually dropped. Unlike Garland-Rooney films outside of the \"Andy Hardy\" series, Rooney's Hardy character is not a musician, so Garland and Rooney do not perform together in the Hardy films. Rooney played the character continuously from age 16 to 25, when he appeared in", "id": "7714497" }, { "contents": "Fay Holden\n\n\nthe depression era. Eventually they left Vancouver and moved to Hollywood. Holden appeared in 46 motion pictures between 1935 and 1958, but is best known for her recurring role as Emily Hardy, mother of Mickey Rooney's character in the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" film series. The series was enormously popular in the late 1930s and early '40s, and Holden was in 15 of the 16 Hardy movies, surpassed only by Rooney, who was in all 16. Holden is also remembered for her performance as Hazel, the mother", "id": "15552902" }, { "contents": "Margaret Early\n\n\nBrent, Bette Davis, and Fay Bainter. She later became a freelance actress and found herself working in various roles at such studios as RKO, Warner Bros., and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her other screen roles include parts in \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939), \"Strike Up The Band\" (1940), \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" (1941), and \"Stage Door Canteen\" (1943). She made her last screen appearance in \"Cinderella Jones\" (1946)", "id": "11267109" }, { "contents": "Sheila Darcy\n\n\n1935 her career had taken off, and from then until 1941 she had roles in 41 films. In most of her early films, she played the heroine in B-movies, often Westerns. Darcy's best known roles were as the female lead in cliffhangers, such as the 1939 film \"Zorro's Fighting Legion\", in which she performed opposite Reed Hadley. She also played the Dragon Lady in the serial \"Terry and the Pirates\", released in 1940. In Westerns, she often played opposite popular cowboy", "id": "21067295" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nIn 1937, Rooney made his first film alongside Judy Garland with \"Thoroughbreds Don't Cry\". Garland and Rooney became close friends as they co-starred in future films and became a successful song-and-dance team. Audiences delighted in seeing the \"playful interactions between the two stars showcase a wonderful chemistry\". Along with three of the \"Andy Hardy\" films, where she portrayed a girl attracted to Andy, they appeared together in a string of successful musicals, including \"Babes in Arms\" (1939", "id": "5690267" }, { "contents": "Brenda Marshall\n\n\nArdis Ankerson (September 29, 1915 – July 30, 1992), known as Brenda Marshall, was a Filipino-born, American film actress. Marshall made her first film appearance in the 1939 \"Espionage Agent\". The following year, she played the leading lady to Errol Flynn in \"The Sea Hawk\". After divorcing actor Richard Gaines in 1940, she married William Holden in 1941, and her own career soon slowed. She starred opposite James Cagney in \"Captains of the Clouds\" (1942).", "id": "14392731" }, { "contents": "Julie Haydon\n\n\nmade by MGM. In 1932, she signed with RKO, and her first major role came that year in \"The Conquerors\", directed by William Wellman Her most notable performance came in 1935's \"The Scoundrel\" playing opposite Noël Coward, but, despite a new contract with MGM, only a few more films were to come in her short career, including \"A Family Affair\" (1937), the initial movie in the Andy Hardy series. Some have held that it was Haydon and not Fay Wray who", "id": "19690260" }, { "contents": "Jean Darling\n\n\nAssociation. She turned down an offer to appear alongside Mickey Rooney in one of the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" movies, and went on Broadway, making her debut in the musical \"Count Me In\" in 1942. Darling's stage career hit a real high when she landed the role of Carrie Pipperidge in the original Broadway production of \"Carousel\" in 1945. She appeared in 850 consecutive performances. Her role as Carrie Pipperidge helped her with parts for radio and TV in the 1950s. She hosted her own television show", "id": "1616169" }, { "contents": "List of Lana Turner performances\n\n\nLana Turner was an American actress who appeared in over fifty films during her career, which spanned four decades. Discovered in 1937 at age 16, she signed a contract with Warner Bros. and appeared in several films for the studio before signing a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The studio's co-founder, Louis B. Mayer, helped further her career by casting her in several youth-oriented comedies and musicals, including \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941),", "id": "7891475" }, { "contents": "Marguerite Chapman\n\n\ncontract to Warner Brothers in 1941, and then with Columbia from 1942 to 1948. She made her film debut in 1940, working for the next two years in small roles. In 1942, her big break came with Republic Pictures when she was cast in the leading female role in the twelve-part adventure film serial \"Spy Smasher\", a production that has been ranked among the best serials ever made. Chapman soon began receiving more leading roles and appeared opposite important stars such as Edward G. Robinson and George Sanders.", "id": "2722471" }, { "contents": "Jeanne Cagney\n\n\nRKO Pictures. However, she signed a long-term contract with Paramount Pictures. She appeared in 19 films between 1939 and 1965, including four films with her brother James: \"Yankee Doodle Dandy\" (1942), \"The Time of Your Life\" (1948), \"A Lion Is in the Streets\" (1953), and \"Man of a Thousand Faces\" (1957). Cagney gave a noted performance opposite Mickey Rooney in the film noir crime film \"Quicksand\" (1950). Cagney", "id": "6954933" }, { "contents": "Little Annie Rooney (1925 film)\n\n\nLittle Annie Rooney is a 1925 American silent comedy-drama film starring Mary Pickford and directed by William Beaudine. Pickford, one of the most successful actresses of the silent era, was best known throughout her career for her iconic portrayals of penniless young girls. After generating only modest box office revenue playing adults in her previous two films, Pickford wrote and produced \"Little Annie Rooney\" to cater to silent film audiences. Though she was 33 years old, Pickford played the title role, an Irish girl living in the slums", "id": "236551" }, { "contents": "Edith Barrett\n\n\n, she married leading man Vincent Price in 1938. The marriage ended in 1948. She and Price had one son, author/poet and environmental activist Vincent Barrett Price (born 1940). Her biggest Broadway success was as star of the now-obscure production \"Mrs. Moonlight\". In her first film, \"Ladies in Retirement\" (1941), she played one of the two half-witted half-sisters of Ida Lupino's homicidal character. Her best remembered movie role is possibly Mrs. Holland's mother-", "id": "18853813" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\nHardy film, \"A Family Affair\", in 1937. Mickey Rooney played Andy Hardy in the series, supported by Lewis Stone, Ann Rutherford, and Fay Holden. The movies were directed by George B. Seitz. Parker's character, Marion, appeared in most of the films, and her romances were a recurring feature of the series. Though she and the character she played were absent from the last two Andy Hardy films of the 1940s, Parker came out of retirement to play Marian Hardy in one more movie,", "id": "18919252" }, { "contents": "Nancy Walker\n\n\nrole provided Walker with her film debut when she signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to make a movie version, starring Lucille Ball (filmed in 1943). In 1943, she also appeared with Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in the second film version of \"Girl Crazy\". Her next film, \"Broadway Rhythm\", in which she had a featured musical number backed by Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra, \"Milkman, Keep Those Bottles Quiet\", ended Walker's contract with Metro. Her dry comic", "id": "9657966" }, { "contents": "List of Gloria Stuart performances\n\n\nstarred in two films opposite Shirley Temple: \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936), and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938), both for 20th Century Fox. She subsequently co-starred in \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939) opposite Don Ameche. Dissatisfied with her career in film, Stuart shifted her focus to stage acting. Between 1940 and 1942, Stuart appeared in numerous summer stock plays in New England, including a 1940 production of \"Our Town\" in which she starred alongside its playwright", "id": "19503931" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nBabes in Arms is the 1939 American film version of the 1937 Broadway musical of the same name. The film version stars Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland, and features Charles Winninger, Guy Kibbee, June Preisser, Grace Hayes, and Betty Jaynes. The film concerns a group of youngsters trying to put on a show to prove their vaudevillian parents wrong and make it to Broadway. The original Broadway script was significantly revamped, restructured, and rewritten to accommodate Hollywood's needs. In 1921, vaudeville performer Joe Moran (Winninger)", "id": "9219782" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nhim when he transferred to MGM in 1938. Turner attracted attention by playing the role of a murder victim in her first film, LeRoy's \"They Won't Forget\" (1937), and she later transitioned into featured roles, often appearing as an ingénue. During the early 1940s, Turner established herself as a leading actress and one of MGM's top performers, appearing in such films as the film noir \"Johnny Eager\" (1941); the musical \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941); the horror film", "id": "11929991" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nthe stature of most leading men. He appeared in a number of films, including \"Words and Music\" in 1948, which paired him for the last time with Garland on film (he appeared with her on one episode as a guest on \"The Judy Garland Show\"). He briefly starred in a CBS radio series, \"Shorty Bell\", in the summer of 1948, and reprised his role as \"Andy Hardy\", with most of the original cast, in a syndicated radio version of \"The", "id": "5690276" }, { "contents": "Donna Reed\n\n\nmany starlets at MGM, she played Mickey Rooney's love interest in an Andy Hardy film, in her case the hugely popular \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942). She was second billed in a children's film, \"Mokey\" (1942). Reed played a love interest in \"Calling Dr. Gillespie\" (1942) and \"Apache Trail\" (1942), then did a thriller with Edward Arnold, \"Eyes in the Night\" (1942), directed by Fred Zinnemann. Reed had", "id": "13840841" }, { "contents": "Evalyn Knapp\n\n\nHis Private Secretary\", a light comedy in which Wayne portrays a suit-and-tie wearing playboy determined to win her over. She also appeared in \"Corruption\" that year opposite Preston Foster. One of her better known film roles was opposite Ken Maynard in the 1934 film \"In Old Santa Fe\" featuring Gene Autry in his first screen appearance, in which he sang with a bluegrass band. She worked through 1941, but her career slowed afterward. In 1943, she played her last role, uncredited,", "id": "560741" }, { "contents": "Kathryn Grayson\n\n\nexercise. Within a year, Grayson had her first screen test. However, the studio executives were not satisfied, and she went through a further six months of lessons until she made her first film appearance in 1941's \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" as the character's secretary Kathryn Land. In the film, she takes part in three musical numbers. Two further films were planned for Grayson in 1941; \"White House Girl\", which was later made in 1948 with Durbin, and \"Very Warm for May", "id": "20045432" }, { "contents": "Susi Nicoletti\n\n\nSusi Nicoletti (3 September 1918 – 5 June 2005) was a Bavarian-born actress best remembered today for over 100 supporting roles mostly in comedy films. She was born as Susanne Emilie Luise Adele Habersack in Munich, but spent most of her childhood with her parents in Amsterdam. Back in Munich, she made her stage debut at age 13. Two years later she became a ballerina. In the early 1930s she turned to cabaret. In 1939, she was offered her first film role. In 1940 she moved to", "id": "6091110" }, { "contents": "Dorothy Morris\n\n\nShe did a screen test for the female lead in \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942), but lost to Donna Reed. Appearing in bit parts in several of the studio's more successful films, Morris was signed to a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract in 1941. For one of her early film roles, \"Cry 'Havoc'\" (1943), she affected a British accent. Her next picture was the well-received drama \"The Human Comedy\", which featured a star cast,", "id": "323808" }, { "contents": "The Courtship of Andy Hardy\n\n\nThe Courtship of Andy Hardy is a 1942 film, part of the Andy Hardy series. It gave an early role to Donna Reed although Mickey Rooney had lobbied for his then-wife Ava Gardner to have her part. Within a few months of the film's release, she filed for divorce. This was the 12th entry in the long-running \"Andy Hardy\" series of sixteen. When Carvel teenager and new tow truck-owner Andy Hardy is stopped by a policeman for driving without a license plate, a radio", "id": "20736523" }, { "contents": "Mae Busch\n\n\nMae Busch (18 June 1891 – 20 April 1946) was an Australian-born actress who worked in both silent and sound films in early Hollywood. In the latter part of her career she appeared in many Laurel and Hardy comedies, where she frequently played Hardy's shrewish wife. Mae Busch was born Annie May Busch in Melbourne, Victoria to popular Australian vaudeville performers Elizabeth Maria Lay and Frederick William Busch. Her mother had been active since 1883 under the stage names \"Dora Devere\" and then \"Dora Busch\";", "id": "10830566" }, { "contents": "Hannelore Schroth\n\n\ndebut at the age of nine in 1931's Max Ophüls' comedy \"Dann schon lieber Lebertran\" opposite her mother. Until age sixteen she attended drama school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Her early film successes include \"Spiel im Sommerwind\" (1938), \"Weisser Flieder\" (1939) and \"Kitty und die Weltkonferenz\" (1939) - the latter of which was her first leading role. During World War II, Hannelore Schroth continued performing in films. Unlike her father, Heinrich Schroth, who was by", "id": "16153872" }, { "contents": "Lupe Vélez\n\n\npopular actress, RKO Pictures did not renew her contract in 1934. Over the next few years, Vélez worked for various studio as a freelance actress; she also spent two years in England where she filmed \"The Morals of Marcus\" and \"Gypsy Melody\" (both 1936). She returned to Los Angeles the following year where she appeared in the final part of the Wheeler & Woolsey comedy \"High Flyers\" (1937). Vélez made her final appearance on Broadway in the 1938 musical \"You Never Know\"", "id": "20716058" }, { "contents": "Katharine Kavanaugh\n\n\nher biggest claims to fame was helping to create the Jones Family characters, who would appear in 17 low-budget films between 1936 and 1940. The first film in the series, \"Every Saturday Night\", was released in 1936, and Kavanaugh would also co-write \"Educating Father\", released later that same year. While her screenwriting career cooled in the late 1930s, she continued writing plays that were produced in the Los Angeles area until her death in 1942. She and her husband, Oliver Ziegfeld (", "id": "21036559" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\n, including \"The Wizard of Oz\" and \"Babes in Arms\". She was the fourth person to receive the award as well as only one of twelve in history to ever be presented with one. Garland starred in three films released in 1940: \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\", \"Strike Up the Band\", and \"Little Nellie Kelly\". In the last, she played her first adult role, a dual role of both mother and daughter. \"Little Nellie Kelly\" was purchased from George M.", "id": "13593089" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nliving on her own. In late 1949 Hardi and her husband moved to Jakarta. Two years later she made her feature film debut in a bit role in the Produksi Film Negara (PFN; State Film Corporation)'s \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". The following year she took a starring role in another PFN film, \"Si Pintjang\", portraying an old woman; as she was only twenty-four, she was artificially aged with make-up. That same year she appeared as the lead love interest in", "id": "15623084" }, { "contents": "Jane Frazee\n\n\nB film \"Melody and Moonlight\" (1940) for Republic Pictures. Shortly after the film's release she was signed by Universal Pictures and was featured in \"Buck Privates\", the high-grossing 1941 comedy/World War II film starring Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The strong impression she made in that film elevated her to leading-lady roles in Universal's popular \"B\" musicals, usually appearing opposite Robert Paige. She left Universal in late 1942, when she married actor-director Glenn Tryon, who", "id": "11708629" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\n\n\nAndy Hardy Meets Debutante is a 1940 American romantic comedy film directed by George B. Seitz. The film stars Lewis Stone, Mickey Rooney, Cecilia Parker, Fay Holden and Judy Garland. It is the ninth of the \"Andy Hardy\" full-length film series. Andy Hardy (Mickey Rooney) from Carvel becomes infatuated with a well-known young socialite, Daphne Fowler (Diana Lewis), from New York City. Even though he hasn’t met the woman in person, he drops her name to his friends and", "id": "11382757" }, { "contents": "Martha Vickers\n\n\nplayed minor roles in several films during the early 1940s, working first at Universal Studios and then at RKO Pictures. She next went to Warner Bros., where \"they gave her the star push, rearranging her surname to 'Vickers.'\" Her work there included the role of Carmen Sternwood, the promiscuous, drug-addicted younger sister of Lauren Bacall's character in \"The Big Sleep\" (1946). She also starred in a musical, \"The Time, the Place and the Girl\", followed by", "id": "721594" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nwas over, she was summoned back to work and ultimately performed two songs as a guest in the Rodgers and Hart biopic \"Words and Music\" (1948), which was her last appearance with Mickey Rooney. Despite the all-star cast, \"Words and Music\" barely broke even at the box office. Having regained her strength, as well as some needed weight during her suspension, Garland felt much better and in the fall of 1948, she returned to MGM to replace a pregnant June Allyson for the musical", "id": "13593101" }, { "contents": "Martha O'Driscoll\n\n\n's Dangerous\" (1937), she was not credited by name. In the Deanna Durbin vehicle \"Mad About Music\" (1937), she was billed as \"pretty girl.\" Her face appeared on such advertisements as Charm-Kurl Supreme Cold Wave and Max Factor Hollywood Face Powder. Universal lent O'Driscoll to MGM for parts in \"The Secret of Dr Kildare\" (1939) and \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1940), starring Mickey Rooney. RKO, however, gave O'Driscoll her first two starring", "id": "20196774" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nMarlia Hardi (also Marlia Hardy; 10 March 192718 June 1984) was an Indonesian film actress active from 1951 to 1983. Born in the Central Javan city of Magelang, she took to the stage in the 1940s before moving to Jakarta in 1949. Two years later she made her feature film debut in \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". Over the next two decades she appeared in over seventy films, became recognized for her depictions of mothers, and received the Citra Award for Best Supporting Actress. Despite her productiveness, however", "id": "15623082" }, { "contents": "Susan Peters\n\n\nLos Angeles. After completing filming of the comedy \"Andy Hardy's Double Life\" (1942) in which she had a lead role, Mervyn LeRoy cast Peters in the drama \"Random Harvest\", in which she portrayed a young woman who falls in love with her step-uncle. The film was one of the top 25 highest-earning films of the year, and Peters's performance garnered her critical acclaim, earning her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. The success of \"Random Harvest\" led", "id": "17519590" }, { "contents": "Paulette Goddard\n\n\nshe appeared as an uncredited extra in two films, the Laurel and Hardy short film \"Berth Marks\" (1929), and George Fitzmaurice's drama \"The Locked Door\" (1929). Following her divorce, she briefly visited Europe before returning to Hollywood in late 1930 with her mother. Her second attempt at acting was no more successful than the first, as she landed work only as an extra. In 1930, she signed her first film contract with producer Samuel Goldwyn to appear as a Goldwyn Girl in \"", "id": "3980436" }, { "contents": "Trixie Friganza\n\n\nTrixie Friganza (born Delia O'Callaghan; November 29, 1870 – February 27, 1955) began her career as an operetta soubrette, working her way from the chorus to starring in musical comedies to having her own feature act on the vaudeville circuit. She transitioned to film in the early 1920s mostly playing small characters that were quirky and comedic and retired from the stage in 1940 due to health concerns. She spent her last years teaching drama to young women in a convent school and when she died she left everything to the convent", "id": "13928014" }, { "contents": "Susan Hayward\n\n\nSusan Hayward (born Edythe Marrenner; June 30, 1917 – March 14, 1975) was an American actress and model. After working as a fashion model, Hayward traveled to Hollywood in 1937. She secured a film contract and played several small supporting roles over the next few years. By the late 1940s, the quality of her film roles had improved, and she achieved recognition for her dramatic abilities with the first of five Academy Award nominations for Best Actress for her performance as an alcoholic in \"Smash-Up,", "id": "14143916" }, { "contents": "Nella Walker\n\n\nyear to 1938, she had 23 film appearances. Her biggest film appearance during this period was in \"Young Dr. Kildare\" with Lionel Barrymore and Lew Ayres. Throughout the 1930s, her career was strong, and despite never being a premier star, she repeatedly had solid acting roles. She finished the decade strongly in 1939 with nine film roles, only three of which were uncredited. The 1940s mirrored her success of the previous decade in many ways, with appearances in 37 films from 1940 to 1947. Later in her", "id": "4686869" }, { "contents": "May Wallace\n\n\nMay Wallace (August 23, 1877 – December 11, 1938) was an American film actress. She appeared in 63 films between 1914 and 1939. Wallace was born in Russiaville, Indiana and died in Los Angeles, California, where she worked in Hollywood as a film actress. She often played supporting roles for producer Hal Roach in his Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang comedies, mostly in maternal roles. Wallace was married to Thomas W. Maddox until her death, they had one daughter and one son. She died of", "id": "9169980" }, { "contents": "Ora Carew\n\n\na film editor. Ora's birth year has been listed as 1893, on her death certificate and is also what her grave says, but Utah birth index and the 1900 census indicate 1891. She was educated by private tutors and at Roland Hall Seminary. After her father died on June 19, 1896, her mother moved with her three children to California. Her screen career began with MGM, following numerous engagements in vaudeville, musical comedy and stock. Some of her most notable films with MGM were \"Go West,", "id": "19207733" }, { "contents": "Eilene Janssen\n\n\nMary Eilene Janssen (born May 25, 1938), is a retired American film and television actress. Eilene Janssen was born in Los Angeles, California on May 25, 1938, to parents Henry Janssen and Mary Ellen Thompson. She began her film career as a child actress in the early 1940s. With her father being a longtime worker for Universal Studios, Eilene Janssen made her first screen appearance in the 1940 film \"Sandy Gets Her Man\". She continued to have bit parts in several movies such as \"Two", "id": "12362318" }, { "contents": "Ann Rutherford\n\n\nLouis Mayer originally refused the loan because he considered the role too minor, but Rutherford passionately appealed to him to change his mind. In December 1939, while promoting the new movie, Rutherford visited six Confederate Army veterans at the Confederate Soldiers Home near Atlanta. One of the veterans gave Rutherford a rose corsage tied with Confederate colors. From 1937 until 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. Her first film in this series was \"You're Only Young Once\"", "id": "6472820" }, { "contents": "Gloria Stuart\n\n\nMan\" (1933), followed by roles in the Shirley Temple musicals \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936) and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938). She also starred as Queen Anne in the musical comedy \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939). Beginning in 1940, Stuart slowed her film career, instead performing in regional theater in New England. In 1945, following a tenure as a contract player for Twentieth Century Fox, Stuart abandoned her acting career and shifted to a career as an artist", "id": "3454792" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nand Judy Garland in the Andy Hardy film \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938). During the shoot, Turner completed her studies with an educational social worker, allowing her to graduate high school that year. The film was a box-office success, and her appearance in it as a flirtatious high school student convinced studio head Louis B. Mayer that Turner could be the next Jean Harlow, a sex symbol who had died six months before Turner's arrival at MGM. Mayer helped further Turner's career by giving her", "id": "11930007" }, { "contents": "Linda Darnell\n\n\nLinda Darnell (born Monetta Eloyse Darnell, October 16, 1923April 10, 1965) was an American film actress. Darnell progressed from modeling as a child to acting in theater and film. At the encouragement of her mother, she made her first film in 1939, and appeared in supporting roles in big-budget films for 20th Century Fox throughout the 1940s. She rose to fame with co-starring roles opposite Tyrone Power in adventure films, and established a main character career after her role in \"Forever Amber\" (", "id": "9752181" }, { "contents": "Marcia Mae Jones\n\n\nsigned her to co-star with Jackie Moran in a few rustic romances; when this series lapsed, both Jones and Moran joined Monogram's popular action-comedy series starring Frankie Darro. As a young adult, she continued to work in motion pictures, notably in \"Nine Girls\" (1944) and \"Arson, Inc.\" (1948). Like many familiar faces of the 1940s, she appeared on numerous television programs. In 1951 she appeared as comic foil to Buster Keaton in Keaton's filmed TV series.", "id": "5963847" }, { "contents": "Peggy Drake\n\n\nPeggy Drake (6 October 1922 – 19 September 2014), was an Austrian film and television actress. She primarily appeared in B-movies of the 1940s. Born Lieselotte Mayer in Vienna, Austria, she moved to the United States with her family at the age of three. Her acting career started with an uncredited role in the film \"Too Many Girls\" (1940). Her career was short-lived, appearing in five films between 1940 and 1942, most notably in the serial film \"King of the", "id": "8901594" }, { "contents": "Signe Hasso\n\n\nfilm in Sweden. In 1933, she made her first film, \"Tystnadens hus\", with German film director/cameraman Harry Hasso, whom she married the same year. They had a son by the time she was 19. They divorced in 1941. In 1940, she moved to the United States, where she signed a contract with RKO Pictures, who promoted her as \"the next Garbo\". With few RKO roles forthcoming, she turned to the stage to make a living. According to the Internet Broadway", "id": "19347089" }, { "contents": "Rita La Roy\n\n\nand the \"cobra dance\" in which her feet and legs were tied together under a stylized snakeskin so that she danced by undulating her torso.\" In 1929, she made her film debut in \"The Delightful Rogue\", starring opposite matinee idol Rod La Rocque. Over the next several years, working as part of the RKO Radio Pictures stable, she appeared in both starring and supporting roles. While her final significant role was in the 1940 comedy-mystery \"Hold That Woman!\", she had several small", "id": "13534727" }, { "contents": "Elizabeth Taylor\n\n\nto socially prominent American parents, Taylor moved with her family to Los Angeles in 1939. She made her acting debut in a minor role in the Universal Pictures film \"There's One Born Every Minute\" (1942) but the studio ended her contract after a year. She was then signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and became a popular teen star after appearing in \"National Velvet\" (1944). She transitioned to more mature roles in the 1950s, when she starred in the comedy \"Father of the", "id": "19979789" }, { "contents": "Karin Booth\n\n\nKarin Booth (born June Francis Hoffman, June 19, 1916 – July 27, 2003) was an American film and TV actress of the 1940s to 1960s. She was born June Francis Hoffman on June 19, 1916, in Minneapolis, Minnesota to Francis T. and Ebba V. Hoffman. She lived in Portland and Los Angeles, attending John Marshall High School. She began her career modeling and being a chorus girl in 1939 and was signed under contract to Paramount Pictures in 1941 under the name Katharine Booth. After changing her", "id": "1386964" }, { "contents": "Saranya Ponvannan\n\n\ndebut in Mani Ratnam's production \"Nayakan,\" as the female lead opposite Kamal Haasan in 1987. She made her first Telugu appearance in 1988 film \"Neerajanam;\" her Malayalam debut was a year later in the 1989 film \"Artham\" starring opposite Mamooty. In 1996 almost during the end of her career as a lead actress she debuted in Kannada cinema in \"Appaji\". After marriage in 1995, she semi retired from acting. In 2000 she appeared playing the lead role in the comedy television series, \"", "id": "2557700" }, { "contents": "Franciska Gaal\n\n\n\", opposite Fredric March. She followed this with the comedy \"The Girl Downstairs\" (1938) with Franchot Tone, a remake of her Austrian success \"Catherine the Last\". In 1939, Gaal co-starred with Bing Crosby in the musical \"Paris Honeymoon\". She returned to Hungary in 1940 because of her mother's illness and remained there for the duration of World War II. In 1946, she began work on a new film in Budapest the Soviet-backed \"Renee XIV\" but filming was", "id": "19308441" }, { "contents": "Jo Ann Sayers\n\n\nstudent production and invited her to Hollywood for a screen test. She was offered a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her first credited film role was in 1938. In 1940, she was selected for the titular role in the Broadway production of \"My Sister Eileen\", opposite Shirley Booth, who was two decades Sayers' senior, which opened on December 26, 1940. She remained in the Broadway cast until June 1942, when she left to marry Anthony A. Bliss (1913-1991), a New", "id": "6389492" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nstar Baby Rosalie Essex (June Preisser), but Mickey gets in a fight with Jeff. Mickey tells Judge Black that his parents' show flopped. The judge gives Mickey 30 days to pay damages. Don and Molly sing \"Where or When\" with an orchestra of children. Mickey has a date with Baby and dines in her house. Mickey wants Baby in the show, which needs $287. She offers to pay it. Mickey smokes a cigar and leaves sick. Mickey tells Patsy that Baby has to play", "id": "9219785" }, { "contents": "Chela Ruiz\n\n\nChela Ruiz (5 June 1921 - 1 December 1999) was an Argentine actress. Her career spanned radio, film, television and stage, and in 1997 the Argentine Association of Actors awarded her the prestigious Premio Podestá for her theatrical work. Ruiz made her professional debut on Radio Splendid, along with her sister Nora Cullen, working as an actress and reader. In the 1940s and 1950s she was known for her narration of radio plays by Nené Cascallar. She began appearing on stage in 1942. A film career followed later", "id": "10450238" }, { "contents": "Petula Clark\n\n\nher film career in the late 1960s, starring in two big musical films. In \"Finian's Rainbow\" (1968), she starred opposite Fred Astaire and she was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for her performance. With her role, she again made history by becoming Astaire's final on-screen dance partner. The following year she was cast with Peter O'Toole in \"Goodbye, Mr. Chips\" (1969), a musical adaptation of the classic James Hilton novella", "id": "19868394" }, { "contents": "Sara Haden\n\n\n\". Haden later became a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract player in the late 1930s and had smallish roles in many of the studio's films, most notably in the Andy Hardy series starring Mickey Rooney, cast as the spinsterish Aunt Milly Forrest. Haden made her last film, \"Andy Hardy Comes Home\", in 1958, but was active on television until a 1965 guest spot on \"Dr. Kildare\". She was most notable for her stern, humorless characterisations such as a truant officer in Shirley Temple's \"", "id": "16961173" }, { "contents": "Rafaela Ottiano\n\n\n's last film was the musical comedy \"I Married an Angel\" (1942), starring Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. During her career in film, she appeared in approximately 45 motion pictures, opposite such actors as Barbara Stanwyck, Conrad Nagel, Peter Lorre, Zasu Pitts, and Katharine Hepburn. Ottiano lived in the Times Square area during the Prohibition Era and never married. She died in 1942, in the Boston home of her late parents, of intestinal cancer at the age of 54. She is buried at", "id": "9444719" }, { "contents": "Doris Davenport\n\n\nDoris Davenport, also known as Doris Jordan (January 1, 1917 – June 18, 1980) was an American film actress during the 1930s and early 1940s. Davenport was born in Moline, Illinois, but raised in Hollywood, California. She started auditioning for acting roles, and performed in her first film in 1934, titled \"Kid Millions\". From 1934 to 1939, she appeared in only five films, supporting herself by working in New York City as a fashion model between films. However, when she auditioned", "id": "2801211" }, { "contents": "Patricia Dane\n\n\nPatricia Dane (born Thelma Pearl Pippins, August 4, 1919 – June 5, 1995) was an American film actress of the 1940s. Dane was born Thelma Pearl Pippins in Blountstown, Florida and was also known as Thelma Byrnes after her stepfather. She began her career designing clothes for a New York City dress firm and was signed to an MGM contract in 1941. Dane's earliest appearances were two uncredited roles in \"Ziegfeld Girl\" and \"I'll Wait for You\" (both 1941). She played the", "id": "18013995" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\na young girl. Her new contract called for a starting salary of $75 a week and scales up to $1000 a week for the seventh year. In November 1935, Parker purchased a new home in Beverly Hills, California. The following year she joined the ballet school of Dave Gould at MGM, along with Maureen O'Sullivan. By the fall of 1936, Parker was studying singing. She played Marian Hardy in the extremely popular Andy Hardy film series in the late 1930s and early 1940s. She was in the original", "id": "18919251" }, { "contents": "Rooney Mara\n\n\nwas always afraid that I might fail.\" Her first and only role in high school was Juliet in \"Romeo and Juliet\", which she got after being signed up to audition by a friend. Mara acted in a few student films while at NYU, and then began her career in acting, first auditioning at the age of nineteen. Mara first appeared as an extra in films which starred her sister, including a bit-part in the 2005 direct-to-video horror film \"\". She found work", "id": "18311311" }, { "contents": "Georgiana Young\n\n\nBelzer and Gladys Royal. Along with her half-sisters, she was raised Roman Catholic. Young's acting career was short-lived, though she appeared in three films. Her debut role was as Berta Hubbard, sister of Mabel Gardiner Hubbard, in Irving Cummings's 1939 biographical film \"The Story of Alexander Graham Bell\", opposite her sisters Loretta (as Mabel), Sally, and Polly Ann. She would later have bit parts in two other films: \"No, No, Nanette\" (1940)", "id": "6269969" }, { "contents": "Glikeriya Bogdanova-Chesnokova\n\n\nmedals for her service. Following the war, in 1946, Bogdanova-Chesnokova returned to the Leningrad State Theatre of Musical Comedy. In 1947, she received the Stalin Prize. In the mid 1950s, Bogdanova-Chesnokova performed during three circus seasons with the clown, The act involved acrobatic actions. In 1955, Bogdanova-Chesnokova made her first significant film appearance. She played Maria Mikhailovna in the comedy film \"Tamer of Tigers\". Generally, Bogdanova-Chesnokova was a character actress taking supporting roles. However, in", "id": "5458931" }, { "contents": "Judi West\n\n\nJudi West (born December 15, 1942) is an American actress, best known for her supporting role opposite Jack Lemmon in the 1966 comedy film \"The Fortune Cookie. Judi West acted in a few films in the 1960s and also appeared in television in the 1960s through the early 1980s. Her notable film appearances include: She had earlier worked on the Broadway stage including \"A Family Affair\" (1962) and \"She Loves Me\" (1963-1964). Married from 1971 to 1989 to actor John Rubinstein", "id": "5957659" }, { "contents": "Judy Holliday\n\n\nJudy Holliday (born Judith Tuvim, June 21, 1921 – June 7, 1965) was an American actress, comedian, and singer. She began her career as part of a nightclub act before working in Broadway plays and musicals. Her success in the 1946 stage production of \"Born Yesterday\" as Billie Dawn led to her being cast in the 1950 film version for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. She appeared in several films", "id": "15453399" }, { "contents": "Elena Lucena\n\n\nMaría Elena Lucena Arcuri (25 September 1914 – 7 October 2015) was an Argentine film actress of the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema (1940–60). She began her career in radio in the 1930s and reached her greatest success with the role of \"Chimbela\", which was later depicted in film, theater and television. Her extensive film career includes approximately 50 films, including notable performances in \"Chimbela\" (1939) and \"Una noche cualquiera\" (1951). During the 1940s she participated in films with comedians", "id": "16119436" }, { "contents": "Florence Nash\n\n\nLynch in \"Within the Law\". She was a noted theater actor and comedian in vaudeville until the 1930s (appearing in sketches including \"In 1999\"), when she moved to Hollywood to try her luck with films. Her most notable role was as \"Nancy Blake\" in the 1939 MGM blockbuster \"The Women\". She also was the author of a book of verse, \"June Dusk\", published in 1918. After her retirement from acting in 1939, she spent the next decade living comfortably in", "id": "6401074" }, { "contents": "Doris Nolan\n\n\nher jitters, the show was a success and Nolan got positive reviews. When Nolan left the play, Woods sent her back to Hollywood, getting her a contract with Universal Pictures. She continued to move back and forth between movies and theater throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Her most prominent film appearance was in the 1938 version of \"Holiday\", where she played alongside Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Her subsequent film roles went downhill, but she reinvigorated her Broadway career with an 18-month stint in \"The Doughgirls\",", "id": "14779965" }, { "contents": "Marjorie Stapp\n\n\nMarjorie Stapp (September 17, 1921 – June 2, 2014), was an American actress who was mainly in low-budget pictures. Stapp began her film career when she signed a contract with the film studio 20th Century-Fox in the 1940s. Her first screen appearance was in \"The Kid from Brooklyn\", a 1946 film starring Danny Kaye. This was followed by another minor appearance in \"Linda, Be Good\" (1947). Eventually, she landed a leading role in the Western movie \"The", "id": "3140505" }, { "contents": "Roshini (actress)\n\n\nRoshini is an Indian film actress who has worked in the Telugu and Tamil film industries. She is the younger sister actress Jyothika and half sister to Nagma. After getting a recommendation by her sister Nagma, Roshini made her acting debut in Selva's comedy film \"Sishya\", where she played the lead role alongside Karthik. She subsequently starred in \"Master\" (1997), opposite Chiranjeevi. Roshini was keen to accept performance-orientated roles and turned down several offers in late 1997 to be a part of films in", "id": "12724581" }, { "contents": "Lola Albright\n\n\nmotion picture debut with a small singing role in the 1947 musical comedy \"The Unfinished Dance\" and then appeared the following year in two Judy Garland movies: \"The Pirate\" and \"Easter Parade\". She first gained studio and public notice in the 1949 film noir production \"Champion\" with her portrayal of the wife of a manipulative boxing manager; she falls for a prizefighter played by Kirk Douglas. For the next several years, she appeared in secondary roles in over 20 films, including several B westerns. Among", "id": "18089616" }, { "contents": "Marika Rökk\n\n\nthe 1930s and 1940s. She had the technical skill and glamour to carry off the formulaic plots and dialogue and provide German audiences with a home grown star to rival the popular American actresses. \"Der Bettelstudent\" and \"Gasparone\", followed by \"Hello Janine!\" in 1939, all starred her together with Johannes Heesters and established them as the \"dream couple\" of the musical comedy genre. In her appearances she cultivated her \"magyar\" accent conveying a notion of \"paprika\" exoticism. Her films, which", "id": "9061566" }, { "contents": "Fay Wray\n\n\nShe continued to star in various films, including \"The Richest Girl in the World\", a second film with Joel McCrea, but by the early 1940s, her appearances became less frequent. She retired from acting in 1942 after her second marriage but due to financial exigencies soon resumed her acting career, and over the next three decades, Wray appeared in several films and also frequently on television. Wray was cast in the 1953-54 ABC situation comedy \"The Pride of the Family\" as Catherine Morrison. Paul Hartman", "id": "10781506" }, { "contents": "Margaret O'Brien\n\n\n(1944), opposite Judy Garland. As Tootie Smith, the feisty but fragile little sister of Judy Garland, she was a bright point in a very good film, especially in her musical numbers with Garland and during a Halloween sequence in which she confronts a grouchy neighbor. For her performance, she was awarded a special juvenile Oscar in 1944. Margaret and June Allyson were known as \"The Town Criers\" of MGM. \"We were always in competition: I wanted to cry better than June, and June wanted", "id": "7504217" }, { "contents": "Ann Sothern\n\n\nSothern appeared in two musical films in 1948, \"April Showers\" opposite Jack Carson and \"Words and Music\" starring an all-star cast of MGM actors, singers and dancers. In 1949, she appeared in the Academy Award-winning film \"A Letter to Three Wives\" for 20th Century Fox. Sothern received excellent reviews for her performance but the acclaim failed to stimulate her career, which had begun to wane in the late 1940s. In 1949, Sothern contracted hepatitis which she would battle for the next three", "id": "2026182" }, { "contents": "Jane Isbell\n\n\nWar soldier who once saved the life of Andrew Jackson. Clark Isbell's father was also a cousin of Alabama Governor William J. Samford. The Isbells moved to Los Angeles when Jane was an infant. The elder of two sisters, she began modeling and appearing as an extra in films when only four years old. In 1932, she made her first Mickey McGuire comedy starring Mickey Rooney and would eventually make five films in the Mickey McGuire series, similar to the Our Gang films. She grew up with child stars for playmates", "id": "12640286" }, { "contents": "Shirley Palmer (actress)\n\n\n1930 she appeared with Dorothy Sebastian and Neil Hamilton in \"Ladies Must Play\", her only film of that year. In 1932 she appeared in \"This Sporting Age\", and in 1933 she starred in probably her most recognizable role, starring opposite John Wayne in \"Somewhere in Sonora\". It would be her last credited role. She had two uncredited roles following that film, one the same year and the other in 1934, after which her career ended. She married once, to writer John Collier, and", "id": "3797930" }, { "contents": "Betty Grable\n\n\n(1930), starring Eddie Cantor. Although she received no on-screen credit for her performance, she led the film's opening musical number, entitled \"Cowboys\". In 1932, she signed a contract with RKO Radio Pictures, and she was assigned to a succession of acting, singing, and dancing classes at the studio's drama school. Her first film for the studio, \"Probation\" (1932), provided the 14-year-old Grable with her first credited screen role. Over the next few years", "id": "17559458" }, { "contents": "Erika Jayne\n\n\n, and pink.\" Soon after she gave birth to a son, Thomas Zizzo, Jr. After the couple divorced a few years later, she relocated to Los Angeles to pursue her dream of becoming a singer and performer. Early in her career, Girardi worked as a waitress to support herself between acting jobs. Girardi began her acting career in the early 1990s by appearing in small roles in several American television series and films. Her first on-screen appearance was a role as Suzanne Morton in the episode \"Prescription for", "id": "22006264" }, { "contents": "Thelma Scott\n\n\nThelma Scott (17 June 1913 – 23 November 2006) was an Australian character actress and television director whose 70-year career in theatre, radio, film and Australian television made her one of her country's most recognizable and beloved personalities. Having started her career in the early 1930s in theatre and film productions, she became one of the nation's biggest radio performers, during the 1940s featuring in productions such as \"Big Sister\" and \"Blue Hills\". She returned to made for TV films in the early late 1950s and", "id": "7852633" } ]
June Preisser ( June 26 , 1920 -- September 19 , 1984 ) was an American actress , briefly popular in musical films during the late 1930s and early 1940s , many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat . Born in New Orleans , Louisiana , Preisser was one of six children , and was an underweight baby . Her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age , in an attempt to build her strength . There she , and her sister Cherry , learnt acrobatics . Their mother was keen to have them follow a career in showbusiness , especially when their father died suddenly , leaving the family with few options to make a living . When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home , and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville , and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936 . The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States , and also performed in Europe , most notably for . Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage , and June was signed to a film contract by . Her first film Dancing Co-Ed ( 1939 ) provided only a small part , but her next film , Babes in Arms ( 1939 ) , gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland . She performed with Rooney and Garland again in Strike Up the Band ( 1940 ) , and with Rooney in two " Andy Hardy " films , Judge Hardy and Son ( 1939 ) and Andy Hardy 's Private Secretary ( 1941 ) . Gallant Sons ( 1940 ) placed her in a comedic murder mystery , and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in ( 1941 ) , and followed this with Sweater Girl ( 1942 ) , opposite Eddie Bracken . She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry , and the birth of a son , Ricky . By this time , MGM had little interest in promoting her , and she left to work for Monogram Pictures . She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years , and played the character " Dodie Rogers " in seven " high school " comedy films with [START_ENT] Frankie Darro [END_ENT] and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948 . Her final film was ( 1948 ) , and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of Annie Get Your Gun
43c9847d-7a80-4bf9-9041-d254904879df_June_Preisse:13
[{"answer": "Frankie Darro", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "1972886", "title": "Frankie Darro"}]}]
[ { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n, and June was signed to a film contract by MGM. Her first film, \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), provided only a small part, but her next film, \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. She performed with Rooney and Garland again in \"Strike Up the Band\" (1940), and with Rooney in two \"Andy Hardy\" films, \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939) and \"Andy Hardy", "id": "17067760" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nJune Preisser (June 26, 1920 – September 19, 1984) was an American actress, popular in musical films during the late 1930s and through the 1940s, many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat. Born in New Orleans, Preisser was one of six children. An underweight child, her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age, in an attempt to build her strength. There she, and her sister Cherry, learned acrobatics. Their mother was keen to have them follow a career", "id": "17067758" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n's Private Secretary\" (1941). \"Gallant Sons\" (1940) placed her in a comedic murder mystery, and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in \"Henry Aldrich for President\" (1941), and followed this with \"Sweater Girl\" (1942), opposite Eddie Bracken. She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry, and the birth of a son, Ricky. By this time, MGM had little interest in promoting her, and she left to work", "id": "17067761" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nfor Monogram Pictures. She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years, and played the character \"Dodie Rogers\" in seven \"high school\" comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948. Her final film was Music Man (1948), and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of \"Annie Get Your Gun\", she retired from acting. She divorced not long after, and taught dancing and acrobatics in Los Angeles, before moving with her son to Florida. They", "id": "17067762" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nin show business, especially when their father died suddenly, leaving the family with few options to make a living. When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home, and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville, and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936. The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States, and also performed in Europe, most notably for George VI of the United Kingdom. Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage", "id": "17067759" }, { "contents": "Melody Trail\n\n\nand Prejudice\" (1940). In 1939, she played the role of Carreen O'Hara, the sister of Scarlet O'Hara, in the film \"Gone with the Wind\". From 1937 to 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. She retired from films in 1950. Rutherford died on June 11, 2012 at her home in Beverly Hills, California. \"Melody Trail\" was filmed August 21–27, 1935. The film had an operating budget of $15,075", "id": "2111015" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nHardy Family movies as a literal girl-next-door to Rooney's character Andy Hardy, in \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938), although Hardy's love interest was played by Lana Turner. They teamed as lead characters for the first time in \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), ultimately appearing in five additional films, including Hardy films \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\" (1940) and \"Life Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland stated that she, Rooney, and other young", "id": "13593082" }, { "contents": "Annie Get Your Gun (film)\n\n\n, MGM's biggest musical comedy star, was originally cast as Annie Oakley. She recorded all her songs for the soundtrack and worked for two months under the direction of Busby Berkeley and dance director Robert Alton. Berkeley and Garland had worked together previously in the late 1930s and early 1940s in a successful series of backstage musicals teaming her with fellow juvenile star Mickey Rooney. Berkeley had been fired from the Garland/Rooney musical \"Girl Crazy\" in 1943 due to personality clashes with musical director Roger Edens and for driving Garland very", "id": "13779025" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nYear for her live recording \"Judy at Carnegie Hall\" (1961). Garland began performing in vaudeville as a child with her two older sisters, and was later signed to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a teenager. Although she appeared in more than two dozen films with MGM and received acclaim for many different roles, she is often best remembered for her portrayal of Dorothy Gale in \"The Wizard of Oz\" (1939). Garland was a frequent on-screen partner of both Mickey Rooney and Gene Kelly,", "id": "13593062" }, { "contents": "Louise LaPlanche\n\n\n, portraying a gypsy girl in \"The Hunchback of Notre Dame\" in 1923. Both LaPlanche began competing in California beauty pageants. In 1939, Louise LaPlanche was crowned Miss Catalina. Her Miss Catalina win led to a film contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). She appeared in the 1940 MGM musical film, \"Strike Up the Band\", which starred Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. LaPlanche later left MGM and signed on to Paramount Studios. She was cast in several Paramount films, including 1942's", "id": "3022959" }, { "contents": "Bonita Granville\n\n\nfilm success led to Granville reprising the role in three sequels from 1938 to 1939, including \"Nancy Drew... Reporter\" (1939). As a young adult, she was once again cast in supporting roles, often in prestigious films such as \"Now, Voyager\" (1942), as well as two Andy Hardy films with Mickey Rooney, \"Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble\" (1944) and \"Love Laughs at Andy Hardy\" (1946). She is also remembered for her starring role in the World", "id": "12873960" }, { "contents": "Eve Arden\n\n\nThis was followed by roles in the crime film \"The Forgotten Woman\" (1939), and the comedy \"At the Circus\" (1939), opposite Groucho Marx, a role that would require her to perform acrobatics. In 1940, she appeared opposite Clark Gable in \"Comrade X\", followed by the drama \"Manpower\" (1941), opposite Marlene Dietrich. She also appeared in a supporting part in the Red Skelton comedy \"Whistling in the Dark\" (1941), and the romantic comedy \"", "id": "10321268" }, { "contents": "Shirley Temple\n\n\nher departure from Twentieth Century-Fox, Shirley was signed by MGM for her comeback; the studio made plans to team her with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney for the Andy Hardy series. The idea was quickly abandoned. The next idea was teaming her with Garland and Rooney for the musical \"Babes on Broadway\". Fearing that either of the latter two could easily upstage Temple, MGM replaced her with Virginia Weidler. As a result, her only film for Metro was \"Kathleen\" in 1941, a story about an", "id": "7504264" }, { "contents": "Barbara Read\n\n\ncompany. When she failed to receive any roles because of her lack of experience, she joined the Laguna Beach Players theater, where she acted in a new play each month for two years. Her first film appearance was one of the three principal girls in the 1936 comedy film \"Three Smart Girls\", which also starred Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. From 1937 through 1939, Read appeared in nine films, most notably starring in \"The Spellbinder\", opposite Lee Tracy. From 1940 through 1948, she appeared in", "id": "5406875" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy\n\n\nLife Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland's character, Betsy Booth, is an aspiring singer and she sings in the first two of these films. However, although Garland songs were planned for the final film, they were eventually dropped. Unlike Garland-Rooney films outside of the \"Andy Hardy\" series, Rooney's Hardy character is not a musician, so Garland and Rooney do not perform together in the Hardy films. Rooney played the character continuously from age 16 to 25, when he appeared in", "id": "7714497" }, { "contents": "Fay Holden\n\n\nthe depression era. Eventually they left Vancouver and moved to Hollywood. Holden appeared in 46 motion pictures between 1935 and 1958, but is best known for her recurring role as Emily Hardy, mother of Mickey Rooney's character in the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" film series. The series was enormously popular in the late 1930s and early '40s, and Holden was in 15 of the 16 Hardy movies, surpassed only by Rooney, who was in all 16. Holden is also remembered for her performance as Hazel, the mother", "id": "15552902" }, { "contents": "Margaret Early\n\n\nBrent, Bette Davis, and Fay Bainter. She later became a freelance actress and found herself working in various roles at such studios as RKO, Warner Bros., and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her other screen roles include parts in \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939), \"Strike Up The Band\" (1940), \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" (1941), and \"Stage Door Canteen\" (1943). She made her last screen appearance in \"Cinderella Jones\" (1946)", "id": "11267109" }, { "contents": "Sheila Darcy\n\n\n1935 her career had taken off, and from then until 1941 she had roles in 41 films. In most of her early films, she played the heroine in B-movies, often Westerns. Darcy's best known roles were as the female lead in cliffhangers, such as the 1939 film \"Zorro's Fighting Legion\", in which she performed opposite Reed Hadley. She also played the Dragon Lady in the serial \"Terry and the Pirates\", released in 1940. In Westerns, she often played opposite popular cowboy", "id": "21067295" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nIn 1937, Rooney made his first film alongside Judy Garland with \"Thoroughbreds Don't Cry\". Garland and Rooney became close friends as they co-starred in future films and became a successful song-and-dance team. Audiences delighted in seeing the \"playful interactions between the two stars showcase a wonderful chemistry\". Along with three of the \"Andy Hardy\" films, where she portrayed a girl attracted to Andy, they appeared together in a string of successful musicals, including \"Babes in Arms\" (1939", "id": "5690267" }, { "contents": "Brenda Marshall\n\n\nArdis Ankerson (September 29, 1915 – July 30, 1992), known as Brenda Marshall, was a Filipino-born, American film actress. Marshall made her first film appearance in the 1939 \"Espionage Agent\". The following year, she played the leading lady to Errol Flynn in \"The Sea Hawk\". After divorcing actor Richard Gaines in 1940, she married William Holden in 1941, and her own career soon slowed. She starred opposite James Cagney in \"Captains of the Clouds\" (1942).", "id": "14392731" }, { "contents": "Julie Haydon\n\n\nmade by MGM. In 1932, she signed with RKO, and her first major role came that year in \"The Conquerors\", directed by William Wellman Her most notable performance came in 1935's \"The Scoundrel\" playing opposite Noël Coward, but, despite a new contract with MGM, only a few more films were to come in her short career, including \"A Family Affair\" (1937), the initial movie in the Andy Hardy series. Some have held that it was Haydon and not Fay Wray who", "id": "19690260" }, { "contents": "Jean Darling\n\n\nAssociation. She turned down an offer to appear alongside Mickey Rooney in one of the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" movies, and went on Broadway, making her debut in the musical \"Count Me In\" in 1942. Darling's stage career hit a real high when she landed the role of Carrie Pipperidge in the original Broadway production of \"Carousel\" in 1945. She appeared in 850 consecutive performances. Her role as Carrie Pipperidge helped her with parts for radio and TV in the 1950s. She hosted her own television show", "id": "1616169" }, { "contents": "List of Lana Turner performances\n\n\nLana Turner was an American actress who appeared in over fifty films during her career, which spanned four decades. Discovered in 1937 at age 16, she signed a contract with Warner Bros. and appeared in several films for the studio before signing a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The studio's co-founder, Louis B. Mayer, helped further her career by casting her in several youth-oriented comedies and musicals, including \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941),", "id": "7891475" }, { "contents": "Marguerite Chapman\n\n\ncontract to Warner Brothers in 1941, and then with Columbia from 1942 to 1948. She made her film debut in 1940, working for the next two years in small roles. In 1942, her big break came with Republic Pictures when she was cast in the leading female role in the twelve-part adventure film serial \"Spy Smasher\", a production that has been ranked among the best serials ever made. Chapman soon began receiving more leading roles and appeared opposite important stars such as Edward G. Robinson and George Sanders.", "id": "2722471" }, { "contents": "Jeanne Cagney\n\n\nRKO Pictures. However, she signed a long-term contract with Paramount Pictures. She appeared in 19 films between 1939 and 1965, including four films with her brother James: \"Yankee Doodle Dandy\" (1942), \"The Time of Your Life\" (1948), \"A Lion Is in the Streets\" (1953), and \"Man of a Thousand Faces\" (1957). Cagney gave a noted performance opposite Mickey Rooney in the film noir crime film \"Quicksand\" (1950). Cagney", "id": "6954933" }, { "contents": "Little Annie Rooney (1925 film)\n\n\nLittle Annie Rooney is a 1925 American silent comedy-drama film starring Mary Pickford and directed by William Beaudine. Pickford, one of the most successful actresses of the silent era, was best known throughout her career for her iconic portrayals of penniless young girls. After generating only modest box office revenue playing adults in her previous two films, Pickford wrote and produced \"Little Annie Rooney\" to cater to silent film audiences. Though she was 33 years old, Pickford played the title role, an Irish girl living in the slums", "id": "236551" }, { "contents": "Edith Barrett\n\n\n, she married leading man Vincent Price in 1938. The marriage ended in 1948. She and Price had one son, author/poet and environmental activist Vincent Barrett Price (born 1940). Her biggest Broadway success was as star of the now-obscure production \"Mrs. Moonlight\". In her first film, \"Ladies in Retirement\" (1941), she played one of the two half-witted half-sisters of Ida Lupino's homicidal character. Her best remembered movie role is possibly Mrs. Holland's mother-", "id": "18853813" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\nHardy film, \"A Family Affair\", in 1937. Mickey Rooney played Andy Hardy in the series, supported by Lewis Stone, Ann Rutherford, and Fay Holden. The movies were directed by George B. Seitz. Parker's character, Marion, appeared in most of the films, and her romances were a recurring feature of the series. Though she and the character she played were absent from the last two Andy Hardy films of the 1940s, Parker came out of retirement to play Marian Hardy in one more movie,", "id": "18919252" }, { "contents": "Nancy Walker\n\n\nrole provided Walker with her film debut when she signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to make a movie version, starring Lucille Ball (filmed in 1943). In 1943, she also appeared with Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in the second film version of \"Girl Crazy\". Her next film, \"Broadway Rhythm\", in which she had a featured musical number backed by Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra, \"Milkman, Keep Those Bottles Quiet\", ended Walker's contract with Metro. Her dry comic", "id": "9657966" }, { "contents": "List of Gloria Stuart performances\n\n\nstarred in two films opposite Shirley Temple: \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936), and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938), both for 20th Century Fox. She subsequently co-starred in \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939) opposite Don Ameche. Dissatisfied with her career in film, Stuart shifted her focus to stage acting. Between 1940 and 1942, Stuart appeared in numerous summer stock plays in New England, including a 1940 production of \"Our Town\" in which she starred alongside its playwright", "id": "19503931" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nBabes in Arms is the 1939 American film version of the 1937 Broadway musical of the same name. The film version stars Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland, and features Charles Winninger, Guy Kibbee, June Preisser, Grace Hayes, and Betty Jaynes. The film concerns a group of youngsters trying to put on a show to prove their vaudevillian parents wrong and make it to Broadway. The original Broadway script was significantly revamped, restructured, and rewritten to accommodate Hollywood's needs. In 1921, vaudeville performer Joe Moran (Winninger)", "id": "9219782" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nhim when he transferred to MGM in 1938. Turner attracted attention by playing the role of a murder victim in her first film, LeRoy's \"They Won't Forget\" (1937), and she later transitioned into featured roles, often appearing as an ingénue. During the early 1940s, Turner established herself as a leading actress and one of MGM's top performers, appearing in such films as the film noir \"Johnny Eager\" (1941); the musical \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941); the horror film", "id": "11929991" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nthe stature of most leading men. He appeared in a number of films, including \"Words and Music\" in 1948, which paired him for the last time with Garland on film (he appeared with her on one episode as a guest on \"The Judy Garland Show\"). He briefly starred in a CBS radio series, \"Shorty Bell\", in the summer of 1948, and reprised his role as \"Andy Hardy\", with most of the original cast, in a syndicated radio version of \"The", "id": "5690276" }, { "contents": "Donna Reed\n\n\nmany starlets at MGM, she played Mickey Rooney's love interest in an Andy Hardy film, in her case the hugely popular \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942). She was second billed in a children's film, \"Mokey\" (1942). Reed played a love interest in \"Calling Dr. Gillespie\" (1942) and \"Apache Trail\" (1942), then did a thriller with Edward Arnold, \"Eyes in the Night\" (1942), directed by Fred Zinnemann. Reed had", "id": "13840841" }, { "contents": "Evalyn Knapp\n\n\nHis Private Secretary\", a light comedy in which Wayne portrays a suit-and-tie wearing playboy determined to win her over. She also appeared in \"Corruption\" that year opposite Preston Foster. One of her better known film roles was opposite Ken Maynard in the 1934 film \"In Old Santa Fe\" featuring Gene Autry in his first screen appearance, in which he sang with a bluegrass band. She worked through 1941, but her career slowed afterward. In 1943, she played her last role, uncredited,", "id": "560741" }, { "contents": "Kathryn Grayson\n\n\nexercise. Within a year, Grayson had her first screen test. However, the studio executives were not satisfied, and she went through a further six months of lessons until she made her first film appearance in 1941's \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" as the character's secretary Kathryn Land. In the film, she takes part in three musical numbers. Two further films were planned for Grayson in 1941; \"White House Girl\", which was later made in 1948 with Durbin, and \"Very Warm for May", "id": "20045432" }, { "contents": "Susi Nicoletti\n\n\nSusi Nicoletti (3 September 1918 – 5 June 2005) was a Bavarian-born actress best remembered today for over 100 supporting roles mostly in comedy films. She was born as Susanne Emilie Luise Adele Habersack in Munich, but spent most of her childhood with her parents in Amsterdam. Back in Munich, she made her stage debut at age 13. Two years later she became a ballerina. In the early 1930s she turned to cabaret. In 1939, she was offered her first film role. In 1940 she moved to", "id": "6091110" }, { "contents": "Dorothy Morris\n\n\nShe did a screen test for the female lead in \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942), but lost to Donna Reed. Appearing in bit parts in several of the studio's more successful films, Morris was signed to a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract in 1941. For one of her early film roles, \"Cry 'Havoc'\" (1943), she affected a British accent. Her next picture was the well-received drama \"The Human Comedy\", which featured a star cast,", "id": "323808" }, { "contents": "The Courtship of Andy Hardy\n\n\nThe Courtship of Andy Hardy is a 1942 film, part of the Andy Hardy series. It gave an early role to Donna Reed although Mickey Rooney had lobbied for his then-wife Ava Gardner to have her part. Within a few months of the film's release, she filed for divorce. This was the 12th entry in the long-running \"Andy Hardy\" series of sixteen. When Carvel teenager and new tow truck-owner Andy Hardy is stopped by a policeman for driving without a license plate, a radio", "id": "20736523" }, { "contents": "Mae Busch\n\n\nMae Busch (18 June 1891 – 20 April 1946) was an Australian-born actress who worked in both silent and sound films in early Hollywood. In the latter part of her career she appeared in many Laurel and Hardy comedies, where she frequently played Hardy's shrewish wife. Mae Busch was born Annie May Busch in Melbourne, Victoria to popular Australian vaudeville performers Elizabeth Maria Lay and Frederick William Busch. Her mother had been active since 1883 under the stage names \"Dora Devere\" and then \"Dora Busch\";", "id": "10830566" }, { "contents": "Hannelore Schroth\n\n\ndebut at the age of nine in 1931's Max Ophüls' comedy \"Dann schon lieber Lebertran\" opposite her mother. Until age sixteen she attended drama school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Her early film successes include \"Spiel im Sommerwind\" (1938), \"Weisser Flieder\" (1939) and \"Kitty und die Weltkonferenz\" (1939) - the latter of which was her first leading role. During World War II, Hannelore Schroth continued performing in films. Unlike her father, Heinrich Schroth, who was by", "id": "16153872" }, { "contents": "Lupe Vélez\n\n\npopular actress, RKO Pictures did not renew her contract in 1934. Over the next few years, Vélez worked for various studio as a freelance actress; she also spent two years in England where she filmed \"The Morals of Marcus\" and \"Gypsy Melody\" (both 1936). She returned to Los Angeles the following year where she appeared in the final part of the Wheeler & Woolsey comedy \"High Flyers\" (1937). Vélez made her final appearance on Broadway in the 1938 musical \"You Never Know\"", "id": "20716058" }, { "contents": "Katharine Kavanaugh\n\n\nher biggest claims to fame was helping to create the Jones Family characters, who would appear in 17 low-budget films between 1936 and 1940. The first film in the series, \"Every Saturday Night\", was released in 1936, and Kavanaugh would also co-write \"Educating Father\", released later that same year. While her screenwriting career cooled in the late 1930s, she continued writing plays that were produced in the Los Angeles area until her death in 1942. She and her husband, Oliver Ziegfeld (", "id": "21036559" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\n, including \"The Wizard of Oz\" and \"Babes in Arms\". She was the fourth person to receive the award as well as only one of twelve in history to ever be presented with one. Garland starred in three films released in 1940: \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\", \"Strike Up the Band\", and \"Little Nellie Kelly\". In the last, she played her first adult role, a dual role of both mother and daughter. \"Little Nellie Kelly\" was purchased from George M.", "id": "13593089" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nliving on her own. In late 1949 Hardi and her husband moved to Jakarta. Two years later she made her feature film debut in a bit role in the Produksi Film Negara (PFN; State Film Corporation)'s \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". The following year she took a starring role in another PFN film, \"Si Pintjang\", portraying an old woman; as she was only twenty-four, she was artificially aged with make-up. That same year she appeared as the lead love interest in", "id": "15623084" }, { "contents": "Jane Frazee\n\n\nB film \"Melody and Moonlight\" (1940) for Republic Pictures. Shortly after the film's release she was signed by Universal Pictures and was featured in \"Buck Privates\", the high-grossing 1941 comedy/World War II film starring Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The strong impression she made in that film elevated her to leading-lady roles in Universal's popular \"B\" musicals, usually appearing opposite Robert Paige. She left Universal in late 1942, when she married actor-director Glenn Tryon, who", "id": "11708629" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\n\n\nAndy Hardy Meets Debutante is a 1940 American romantic comedy film directed by George B. Seitz. The film stars Lewis Stone, Mickey Rooney, Cecilia Parker, Fay Holden and Judy Garland. It is the ninth of the \"Andy Hardy\" full-length film series. Andy Hardy (Mickey Rooney) from Carvel becomes infatuated with a well-known young socialite, Daphne Fowler (Diana Lewis), from New York City. Even though he hasn’t met the woman in person, he drops her name to his friends and", "id": "11382757" }, { "contents": "Martha Vickers\n\n\nplayed minor roles in several films during the early 1940s, working first at Universal Studios and then at RKO Pictures. She next went to Warner Bros., where \"they gave her the star push, rearranging her surname to 'Vickers.'\" Her work there included the role of Carmen Sternwood, the promiscuous, drug-addicted younger sister of Lauren Bacall's character in \"The Big Sleep\" (1946). She also starred in a musical, \"The Time, the Place and the Girl\", followed by", "id": "721594" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nwas over, she was summoned back to work and ultimately performed two songs as a guest in the Rodgers and Hart biopic \"Words and Music\" (1948), which was her last appearance with Mickey Rooney. Despite the all-star cast, \"Words and Music\" barely broke even at the box office. Having regained her strength, as well as some needed weight during her suspension, Garland felt much better and in the fall of 1948, she returned to MGM to replace a pregnant June Allyson for the musical", "id": "13593101" }, { "contents": "Martha O'Driscoll\n\n\n's Dangerous\" (1937), she was not credited by name. In the Deanna Durbin vehicle \"Mad About Music\" (1937), she was billed as \"pretty girl.\" Her face appeared on such advertisements as Charm-Kurl Supreme Cold Wave and Max Factor Hollywood Face Powder. Universal lent O'Driscoll to MGM for parts in \"The Secret of Dr Kildare\" (1939) and \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1940), starring Mickey Rooney. RKO, however, gave O'Driscoll her first two starring", "id": "20196774" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nMarlia Hardi (also Marlia Hardy; 10 March 192718 June 1984) was an Indonesian film actress active from 1951 to 1983. Born in the Central Javan city of Magelang, she took to the stage in the 1940s before moving to Jakarta in 1949. Two years later she made her feature film debut in \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". Over the next two decades she appeared in over seventy films, became recognized for her depictions of mothers, and received the Citra Award for Best Supporting Actress. Despite her productiveness, however", "id": "15623082" }, { "contents": "Susan Peters\n\n\nLos Angeles. After completing filming of the comedy \"Andy Hardy's Double Life\" (1942) in which she had a lead role, Mervyn LeRoy cast Peters in the drama \"Random Harvest\", in which she portrayed a young woman who falls in love with her step-uncle. The film was one of the top 25 highest-earning films of the year, and Peters's performance garnered her critical acclaim, earning her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. The success of \"Random Harvest\" led", "id": "17519590" }, { "contents": "Paulette Goddard\n\n\nshe appeared as an uncredited extra in two films, the Laurel and Hardy short film \"Berth Marks\" (1929), and George Fitzmaurice's drama \"The Locked Door\" (1929). Following her divorce, she briefly visited Europe before returning to Hollywood in late 1930 with her mother. Her second attempt at acting was no more successful than the first, as she landed work only as an extra. In 1930, she signed her first film contract with producer Samuel Goldwyn to appear as a Goldwyn Girl in \"", "id": "3980436" }, { "contents": "Trixie Friganza\n\n\nTrixie Friganza (born Delia O'Callaghan; November 29, 1870 – February 27, 1955) began her career as an operetta soubrette, working her way from the chorus to starring in musical comedies to having her own feature act on the vaudeville circuit. She transitioned to film in the early 1920s mostly playing small characters that were quirky and comedic and retired from the stage in 1940 due to health concerns. She spent her last years teaching drama to young women in a convent school and when she died she left everything to the convent", "id": "13928014" }, { "contents": "Susan Hayward\n\n\nSusan Hayward (born Edythe Marrenner; June 30, 1917 – March 14, 1975) was an American actress and model. After working as a fashion model, Hayward traveled to Hollywood in 1937. She secured a film contract and played several small supporting roles over the next few years. By the late 1940s, the quality of her film roles had improved, and she achieved recognition for her dramatic abilities with the first of five Academy Award nominations for Best Actress for her performance as an alcoholic in \"Smash-Up,", "id": "14143916" }, { "contents": "Nella Walker\n\n\nyear to 1938, she had 23 film appearances. Her biggest film appearance during this period was in \"Young Dr. Kildare\" with Lionel Barrymore and Lew Ayres. Throughout the 1930s, her career was strong, and despite never being a premier star, she repeatedly had solid acting roles. She finished the decade strongly in 1939 with nine film roles, only three of which were uncredited. The 1940s mirrored her success of the previous decade in many ways, with appearances in 37 films from 1940 to 1947. Later in her", "id": "4686869" }, { "contents": "May Wallace\n\n\nMay Wallace (August 23, 1877 – December 11, 1938) was an American film actress. She appeared in 63 films between 1914 and 1939. Wallace was born in Russiaville, Indiana and died in Los Angeles, California, where she worked in Hollywood as a film actress. She often played supporting roles for producer Hal Roach in his Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang comedies, mostly in maternal roles. Wallace was married to Thomas W. Maddox until her death, they had one daughter and one son. She died of", "id": "9169980" }, { "contents": "Ora Carew\n\n\na film editor. Ora's birth year has been listed as 1893, on her death certificate and is also what her grave says, but Utah birth index and the 1900 census indicate 1891. She was educated by private tutors and at Roland Hall Seminary. After her father died on June 19, 1896, her mother moved with her three children to California. Her screen career began with MGM, following numerous engagements in vaudeville, musical comedy and stock. Some of her most notable films with MGM were \"Go West,", "id": "19207733" }, { "contents": "Eilene Janssen\n\n\nMary Eilene Janssen (born May 25, 1938), is a retired American film and television actress. Eilene Janssen was born in Los Angeles, California on May 25, 1938, to parents Henry Janssen and Mary Ellen Thompson. She began her film career as a child actress in the early 1940s. With her father being a longtime worker for Universal Studios, Eilene Janssen made her first screen appearance in the 1940 film \"Sandy Gets Her Man\". She continued to have bit parts in several movies such as \"Two", "id": "12362318" }, { "contents": "Ann Rutherford\n\n\nLouis Mayer originally refused the loan because he considered the role too minor, but Rutherford passionately appealed to him to change his mind. In December 1939, while promoting the new movie, Rutherford visited six Confederate Army veterans at the Confederate Soldiers Home near Atlanta. One of the veterans gave Rutherford a rose corsage tied with Confederate colors. From 1937 until 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. Her first film in this series was \"You're Only Young Once\"", "id": "6472820" }, { "contents": "Gloria Stuart\n\n\nMan\" (1933), followed by roles in the Shirley Temple musicals \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936) and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938). She also starred as Queen Anne in the musical comedy \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939). Beginning in 1940, Stuart slowed her film career, instead performing in regional theater in New England. In 1945, following a tenure as a contract player for Twentieth Century Fox, Stuart abandoned her acting career and shifted to a career as an artist", "id": "3454792" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nand Judy Garland in the Andy Hardy film \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938). During the shoot, Turner completed her studies with an educational social worker, allowing her to graduate high school that year. The film was a box-office success, and her appearance in it as a flirtatious high school student convinced studio head Louis B. Mayer that Turner could be the next Jean Harlow, a sex symbol who had died six months before Turner's arrival at MGM. Mayer helped further Turner's career by giving her", "id": "11930007" }, { "contents": "Linda Darnell\n\n\nLinda Darnell (born Monetta Eloyse Darnell, October 16, 1923April 10, 1965) was an American film actress. Darnell progressed from modeling as a child to acting in theater and film. At the encouragement of her mother, she made her first film in 1939, and appeared in supporting roles in big-budget films for 20th Century Fox throughout the 1940s. She rose to fame with co-starring roles opposite Tyrone Power in adventure films, and established a main character career after her role in \"Forever Amber\" (", "id": "9752181" }, { "contents": "Marcia Mae Jones\n\n\nsigned her to co-star with Jackie Moran in a few rustic romances; when this series lapsed, both Jones and Moran joined Monogram's popular action-comedy series starring Frankie Darro. As a young adult, she continued to work in motion pictures, notably in \"Nine Girls\" (1944) and \"Arson, Inc.\" (1948). Like many familiar faces of the 1940s, she appeared on numerous television programs. In 1951 she appeared as comic foil to Buster Keaton in Keaton's filmed TV series.", "id": "5963847" }, { "contents": "Peggy Drake\n\n\nPeggy Drake (6 October 1922 – 19 September 2014), was an Austrian film and television actress. She primarily appeared in B-movies of the 1940s. Born Lieselotte Mayer in Vienna, Austria, she moved to the United States with her family at the age of three. Her acting career started with an uncredited role in the film \"Too Many Girls\" (1940). Her career was short-lived, appearing in five films between 1940 and 1942, most notably in the serial film \"King of the", "id": "8901594" }, { "contents": "Signe Hasso\n\n\nfilm in Sweden. In 1933, she made her first film, \"Tystnadens hus\", with German film director/cameraman Harry Hasso, whom she married the same year. They had a son by the time she was 19. They divorced in 1941. In 1940, she moved to the United States, where she signed a contract with RKO Pictures, who promoted her as \"the next Garbo\". With few RKO roles forthcoming, she turned to the stage to make a living. According to the Internet Broadway", "id": "19347089" }, { "contents": "Rita La Roy\n\n\nand the \"cobra dance\" in which her feet and legs were tied together under a stylized snakeskin so that she danced by undulating her torso.\" In 1929, she made her film debut in \"The Delightful Rogue\", starring opposite matinee idol Rod La Rocque. Over the next several years, working as part of the RKO Radio Pictures stable, she appeared in both starring and supporting roles. While her final significant role was in the 1940 comedy-mystery \"Hold That Woman!\", she had several small", "id": "13534727" }, { "contents": "Elizabeth Taylor\n\n\nto socially prominent American parents, Taylor moved with her family to Los Angeles in 1939. She made her acting debut in a minor role in the Universal Pictures film \"There's One Born Every Minute\" (1942) but the studio ended her contract after a year. She was then signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and became a popular teen star after appearing in \"National Velvet\" (1944). She transitioned to more mature roles in the 1950s, when she starred in the comedy \"Father of the", "id": "19979789" }, { "contents": "Karin Booth\n\n\nKarin Booth (born June Francis Hoffman, June 19, 1916 – July 27, 2003) was an American film and TV actress of the 1940s to 1960s. She was born June Francis Hoffman on June 19, 1916, in Minneapolis, Minnesota to Francis T. and Ebba V. Hoffman. She lived in Portland and Los Angeles, attending John Marshall High School. She began her career modeling and being a chorus girl in 1939 and was signed under contract to Paramount Pictures in 1941 under the name Katharine Booth. After changing her", "id": "1386964" }, { "contents": "Saranya Ponvannan\n\n\ndebut in Mani Ratnam's production \"Nayakan,\" as the female lead opposite Kamal Haasan in 1987. She made her first Telugu appearance in 1988 film \"Neerajanam;\" her Malayalam debut was a year later in the 1989 film \"Artham\" starring opposite Mamooty. In 1996 almost during the end of her career as a lead actress she debuted in Kannada cinema in \"Appaji\". After marriage in 1995, she semi retired from acting. In 2000 she appeared playing the lead role in the comedy television series, \"", "id": "2557700" }, { "contents": "Franciska Gaal\n\n\n\", opposite Fredric March. She followed this with the comedy \"The Girl Downstairs\" (1938) with Franchot Tone, a remake of her Austrian success \"Catherine the Last\". In 1939, Gaal co-starred with Bing Crosby in the musical \"Paris Honeymoon\". She returned to Hungary in 1940 because of her mother's illness and remained there for the duration of World War II. In 1946, she began work on a new film in Budapest the Soviet-backed \"Renee XIV\" but filming was", "id": "19308441" }, { "contents": "Jo Ann Sayers\n\n\nstudent production and invited her to Hollywood for a screen test. She was offered a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her first credited film role was in 1938. In 1940, she was selected for the titular role in the Broadway production of \"My Sister Eileen\", opposite Shirley Booth, who was two decades Sayers' senior, which opened on December 26, 1940. She remained in the Broadway cast until June 1942, when she left to marry Anthony A. Bliss (1913-1991), a New", "id": "6389492" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nstar Baby Rosalie Essex (June Preisser), but Mickey gets in a fight with Jeff. Mickey tells Judge Black that his parents' show flopped. The judge gives Mickey 30 days to pay damages. Don and Molly sing \"Where or When\" with an orchestra of children. Mickey has a date with Baby and dines in her house. Mickey wants Baby in the show, which needs $287. She offers to pay it. Mickey smokes a cigar and leaves sick. Mickey tells Patsy that Baby has to play", "id": "9219785" }, { "contents": "Chela Ruiz\n\n\nChela Ruiz (5 June 1921 - 1 December 1999) was an Argentine actress. Her career spanned radio, film, television and stage, and in 1997 the Argentine Association of Actors awarded her the prestigious Premio Podestá for her theatrical work. Ruiz made her professional debut on Radio Splendid, along with her sister Nora Cullen, working as an actress and reader. In the 1940s and 1950s she was known for her narration of radio plays by Nené Cascallar. She began appearing on stage in 1942. A film career followed later", "id": "10450238" }, { "contents": "Petula Clark\n\n\nher film career in the late 1960s, starring in two big musical films. In \"Finian's Rainbow\" (1968), she starred opposite Fred Astaire and she was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for her performance. With her role, she again made history by becoming Astaire's final on-screen dance partner. The following year she was cast with Peter O'Toole in \"Goodbye, Mr. Chips\" (1969), a musical adaptation of the classic James Hilton novella", "id": "19868394" }, { "contents": "Sara Haden\n\n\n\". Haden later became a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract player in the late 1930s and had smallish roles in many of the studio's films, most notably in the Andy Hardy series starring Mickey Rooney, cast as the spinsterish Aunt Milly Forrest. Haden made her last film, \"Andy Hardy Comes Home\", in 1958, but was active on television until a 1965 guest spot on \"Dr. Kildare\". She was most notable for her stern, humorless characterisations such as a truant officer in Shirley Temple's \"", "id": "16961173" }, { "contents": "Rafaela Ottiano\n\n\n's last film was the musical comedy \"I Married an Angel\" (1942), starring Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. During her career in film, she appeared in approximately 45 motion pictures, opposite such actors as Barbara Stanwyck, Conrad Nagel, Peter Lorre, Zasu Pitts, and Katharine Hepburn. Ottiano lived in the Times Square area during the Prohibition Era and never married. She died in 1942, in the Boston home of her late parents, of intestinal cancer at the age of 54. She is buried at", "id": "9444719" }, { "contents": "Doris Davenport\n\n\nDoris Davenport, also known as Doris Jordan (January 1, 1917 – June 18, 1980) was an American film actress during the 1930s and early 1940s. Davenport was born in Moline, Illinois, but raised in Hollywood, California. She started auditioning for acting roles, and performed in her first film in 1934, titled \"Kid Millions\". From 1934 to 1939, she appeared in only five films, supporting herself by working in New York City as a fashion model between films. However, when she auditioned", "id": "2801211" }, { "contents": "Patricia Dane\n\n\nPatricia Dane (born Thelma Pearl Pippins, August 4, 1919 – June 5, 1995) was an American film actress of the 1940s. Dane was born Thelma Pearl Pippins in Blountstown, Florida and was also known as Thelma Byrnes after her stepfather. She began her career designing clothes for a New York City dress firm and was signed to an MGM contract in 1941. Dane's earliest appearances were two uncredited roles in \"Ziegfeld Girl\" and \"I'll Wait for You\" (both 1941). She played the", "id": "18013995" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\na young girl. Her new contract called for a starting salary of $75 a week and scales up to $1000 a week for the seventh year. In November 1935, Parker purchased a new home in Beverly Hills, California. The following year she joined the ballet school of Dave Gould at MGM, along with Maureen O'Sullivan. By the fall of 1936, Parker was studying singing. She played Marian Hardy in the extremely popular Andy Hardy film series in the late 1930s and early 1940s. She was in the original", "id": "18919251" }, { "contents": "Rooney Mara\n\n\nwas always afraid that I might fail.\" Her first and only role in high school was Juliet in \"Romeo and Juliet\", which she got after being signed up to audition by a friend. Mara acted in a few student films while at NYU, and then began her career in acting, first auditioning at the age of nineteen. Mara first appeared as an extra in films which starred her sister, including a bit-part in the 2005 direct-to-video horror film \"\". She found work", "id": "18311311" }, { "contents": "Georgiana Young\n\n\nBelzer and Gladys Royal. Along with her half-sisters, she was raised Roman Catholic. Young's acting career was short-lived, though she appeared in three films. Her debut role was as Berta Hubbard, sister of Mabel Gardiner Hubbard, in Irving Cummings's 1939 biographical film \"The Story of Alexander Graham Bell\", opposite her sisters Loretta (as Mabel), Sally, and Polly Ann. She would later have bit parts in two other films: \"No, No, Nanette\" (1940)", "id": "6269969" }, { "contents": "Glikeriya Bogdanova-Chesnokova\n\n\nmedals for her service. Following the war, in 1946, Bogdanova-Chesnokova returned to the Leningrad State Theatre of Musical Comedy. In 1947, she received the Stalin Prize. In the mid 1950s, Bogdanova-Chesnokova performed during three circus seasons with the clown, The act involved acrobatic actions. In 1955, Bogdanova-Chesnokova made her first significant film appearance. She played Maria Mikhailovna in the comedy film \"Tamer of Tigers\". Generally, Bogdanova-Chesnokova was a character actress taking supporting roles. However, in", "id": "5458931" }, { "contents": "Judi West\n\n\nJudi West (born December 15, 1942) is an American actress, best known for her supporting role opposite Jack Lemmon in the 1966 comedy film \"The Fortune Cookie. Judi West acted in a few films in the 1960s and also appeared in television in the 1960s through the early 1980s. Her notable film appearances include: She had earlier worked on the Broadway stage including \"A Family Affair\" (1962) and \"She Loves Me\" (1963-1964). Married from 1971 to 1989 to actor John Rubinstein", "id": "5957659" }, { "contents": "Judy Holliday\n\n\nJudy Holliday (born Judith Tuvim, June 21, 1921 – June 7, 1965) was an American actress, comedian, and singer. She began her career as part of a nightclub act before working in Broadway plays and musicals. Her success in the 1946 stage production of \"Born Yesterday\" as Billie Dawn led to her being cast in the 1950 film version for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. She appeared in several films", "id": "15453399" }, { "contents": "Elena Lucena\n\n\nMaría Elena Lucena Arcuri (25 September 1914 – 7 October 2015) was an Argentine film actress of the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema (1940–60). She began her career in radio in the 1930s and reached her greatest success with the role of \"Chimbela\", which was later depicted in film, theater and television. Her extensive film career includes approximately 50 films, including notable performances in \"Chimbela\" (1939) and \"Una noche cualquiera\" (1951). During the 1940s she participated in films with comedians", "id": "16119436" }, { "contents": "Florence Nash\n\n\nLynch in \"Within the Law\". She was a noted theater actor and comedian in vaudeville until the 1930s (appearing in sketches including \"In 1999\"), when she moved to Hollywood to try her luck with films. Her most notable role was as \"Nancy Blake\" in the 1939 MGM blockbuster \"The Women\". She also was the author of a book of verse, \"June Dusk\", published in 1918. After her retirement from acting in 1939, she spent the next decade living comfortably in", "id": "6401074" }, { "contents": "Doris Nolan\n\n\nher jitters, the show was a success and Nolan got positive reviews. When Nolan left the play, Woods sent her back to Hollywood, getting her a contract with Universal Pictures. She continued to move back and forth between movies and theater throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Her most prominent film appearance was in the 1938 version of \"Holiday\", where she played alongside Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Her subsequent film roles went downhill, but she reinvigorated her Broadway career with an 18-month stint in \"The Doughgirls\",", "id": "14779965" }, { "contents": "Marjorie Stapp\n\n\nMarjorie Stapp (September 17, 1921 – June 2, 2014), was an American actress who was mainly in low-budget pictures. Stapp began her film career when she signed a contract with the film studio 20th Century-Fox in the 1940s. Her first screen appearance was in \"The Kid from Brooklyn\", a 1946 film starring Danny Kaye. This was followed by another minor appearance in \"Linda, Be Good\" (1947). Eventually, she landed a leading role in the Western movie \"The", "id": "3140505" }, { "contents": "Roshini (actress)\n\n\nRoshini is an Indian film actress who has worked in the Telugu and Tamil film industries. She is the younger sister actress Jyothika and half sister to Nagma. After getting a recommendation by her sister Nagma, Roshini made her acting debut in Selva's comedy film \"Sishya\", where she played the lead role alongside Karthik. She subsequently starred in \"Master\" (1997), opposite Chiranjeevi. Roshini was keen to accept performance-orientated roles and turned down several offers in late 1997 to be a part of films in", "id": "12724581" }, { "contents": "Lola Albright\n\n\nmotion picture debut with a small singing role in the 1947 musical comedy \"The Unfinished Dance\" and then appeared the following year in two Judy Garland movies: \"The Pirate\" and \"Easter Parade\". She first gained studio and public notice in the 1949 film noir production \"Champion\" with her portrayal of the wife of a manipulative boxing manager; she falls for a prizefighter played by Kirk Douglas. For the next several years, she appeared in secondary roles in over 20 films, including several B westerns. Among", "id": "18089616" }, { "contents": "Marika Rökk\n\n\nthe 1930s and 1940s. She had the technical skill and glamour to carry off the formulaic plots and dialogue and provide German audiences with a home grown star to rival the popular American actresses. \"Der Bettelstudent\" and \"Gasparone\", followed by \"Hello Janine!\" in 1939, all starred her together with Johannes Heesters and established them as the \"dream couple\" of the musical comedy genre. In her appearances she cultivated her \"magyar\" accent conveying a notion of \"paprika\" exoticism. Her films, which", "id": "9061566" }, { "contents": "Fay Wray\n\n\nShe continued to star in various films, including \"The Richest Girl in the World\", a second film with Joel McCrea, but by the early 1940s, her appearances became less frequent. She retired from acting in 1942 after her second marriage but due to financial exigencies soon resumed her acting career, and over the next three decades, Wray appeared in several films and also frequently on television. Wray was cast in the 1953-54 ABC situation comedy \"The Pride of the Family\" as Catherine Morrison. Paul Hartman", "id": "10781506" }, { "contents": "Margaret O'Brien\n\n\n(1944), opposite Judy Garland. As Tootie Smith, the feisty but fragile little sister of Judy Garland, she was a bright point in a very good film, especially in her musical numbers with Garland and during a Halloween sequence in which she confronts a grouchy neighbor. For her performance, she was awarded a special juvenile Oscar in 1944. Margaret and June Allyson were known as \"The Town Criers\" of MGM. \"We were always in competition: I wanted to cry better than June, and June wanted", "id": "7504217" }, { "contents": "Ann Sothern\n\n\nSothern appeared in two musical films in 1948, \"April Showers\" opposite Jack Carson and \"Words and Music\" starring an all-star cast of MGM actors, singers and dancers. In 1949, she appeared in the Academy Award-winning film \"A Letter to Three Wives\" for 20th Century Fox. Sothern received excellent reviews for her performance but the acclaim failed to stimulate her career, which had begun to wane in the late 1940s. In 1949, Sothern contracted hepatitis which she would battle for the next three", "id": "2026182" }, { "contents": "Jane Isbell\n\n\nWar soldier who once saved the life of Andrew Jackson. Clark Isbell's father was also a cousin of Alabama Governor William J. Samford. The Isbells moved to Los Angeles when Jane was an infant. The elder of two sisters, she began modeling and appearing as an extra in films when only four years old. In 1932, she made her first Mickey McGuire comedy starring Mickey Rooney and would eventually make five films in the Mickey McGuire series, similar to the Our Gang films. She grew up with child stars for playmates", "id": "12640286" }, { "contents": "Shirley Palmer (actress)\n\n\n1930 she appeared with Dorothy Sebastian and Neil Hamilton in \"Ladies Must Play\", her only film of that year. In 1932 she appeared in \"This Sporting Age\", and in 1933 she starred in probably her most recognizable role, starring opposite John Wayne in \"Somewhere in Sonora\". It would be her last credited role. She had two uncredited roles following that film, one the same year and the other in 1934, after which her career ended. She married once, to writer John Collier, and", "id": "3797930" }, { "contents": "Betty Grable\n\n\n(1930), starring Eddie Cantor. Although she received no on-screen credit for her performance, she led the film's opening musical number, entitled \"Cowboys\". In 1932, she signed a contract with RKO Radio Pictures, and she was assigned to a succession of acting, singing, and dancing classes at the studio's drama school. Her first film for the studio, \"Probation\" (1932), provided the 14-year-old Grable with her first credited screen role. Over the next few years", "id": "17559458" }, { "contents": "Erika Jayne\n\n\n, and pink.\" Soon after she gave birth to a son, Thomas Zizzo, Jr. After the couple divorced a few years later, she relocated to Los Angeles to pursue her dream of becoming a singer and performer. Early in her career, Girardi worked as a waitress to support herself between acting jobs. Girardi began her acting career in the early 1990s by appearing in small roles in several American television series and films. Her first on-screen appearance was a role as Suzanne Morton in the episode \"Prescription for", "id": "22006264" }, { "contents": "Thelma Scott\n\n\nThelma Scott (17 June 1913 – 23 November 2006) was an Australian character actress and television director whose 70-year career in theatre, radio, film and Australian television made her one of her country's most recognizable and beloved personalities. Having started her career in the early 1930s in theatre and film productions, she became one of the nation's biggest radio performers, during the 1940s featuring in productions such as \"Big Sister\" and \"Blue Hills\". She returned to made for TV films in the early late 1950s and", "id": "7852633" } ]
June Preisser ( June 26 , 1920 -- September 19 , 1984 ) was an American actress , briefly popular in musical films during the late 1930s and early 1940s , many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat . Born in New Orleans , Louisiana , Preisser was one of six children , and was an underweight baby . Her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age , in an attempt to build her strength . There she , and her sister Cherry , learnt acrobatics . Their mother was keen to have them follow a career in showbusiness , especially when their father died suddenly , leaving the family with few options to make a living . When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home , and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville , and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936 . The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States , and also performed in Europe , most notably for . Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage , and June was signed to a film contract by . Her first film Dancing Co-Ed ( 1939 ) provided only a small part , but her next film , Babes in Arms ( 1939 ) , gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland . She performed with Rooney and Garland again in Strike Up the Band ( 1940 ) , and with Rooney in two " Andy Hardy " films , Judge Hardy and Son ( 1939 ) and Andy Hardy 's Private Secretary ( 1941 ) . Gallant Sons ( 1940 ) placed her in a comedic murder mystery , and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in ( 1941 ) , and followed this with Sweater Girl ( 1942 ) , opposite Eddie Bracken . She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry , and the birth of a son , Ricky . By this time , MGM had little interest in promoting her , and she left to work for Monogram Pictures . She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years , and played the character " Dodie Rogers " in seven " high school " comedy films with Frankie Darro and [START_ENT] Noel Neill [END_ENT] from 1946 to 1948 . Her final film was ( 1948 ) , and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of Annie Get Your Gun
6def736f-6e9d-4fce-88e6-d63f1b674fb4_June_Preisse:14
[{"answer": "Noel Neill", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "2062226", "title": "Noel Neill"}]}]
[ { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n, and June was signed to a film contract by MGM. Her first film, \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), provided only a small part, but her next film, \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. She performed with Rooney and Garland again in \"Strike Up the Band\" (1940), and with Rooney in two \"Andy Hardy\" films, \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939) and \"Andy Hardy", "id": "17067760" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nJune Preisser (June 26, 1920 – September 19, 1984) was an American actress, popular in musical films during the late 1930s and through the 1940s, many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat. Born in New Orleans, Preisser was one of six children. An underweight child, her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age, in an attempt to build her strength. There she, and her sister Cherry, learned acrobatics. Their mother was keen to have them follow a career", "id": "17067758" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n's Private Secretary\" (1941). \"Gallant Sons\" (1940) placed her in a comedic murder mystery, and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in \"Henry Aldrich for President\" (1941), and followed this with \"Sweater Girl\" (1942), opposite Eddie Bracken. She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry, and the birth of a son, Ricky. By this time, MGM had little interest in promoting her, and she left to work", "id": "17067761" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nfor Monogram Pictures. She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years, and played the character \"Dodie Rogers\" in seven \"high school\" comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948. Her final film was Music Man (1948), and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of \"Annie Get Your Gun\", she retired from acting. She divorced not long after, and taught dancing and acrobatics in Los Angeles, before moving with her son to Florida. They", "id": "17067762" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nin show business, especially when their father died suddenly, leaving the family with few options to make a living. When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home, and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville, and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936. The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States, and also performed in Europe, most notably for George VI of the United Kingdom. Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage", "id": "17067759" }, { "contents": "Melody Trail\n\n\nand Prejudice\" (1940). In 1939, she played the role of Carreen O'Hara, the sister of Scarlet O'Hara, in the film \"Gone with the Wind\". From 1937 to 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. She retired from films in 1950. Rutherford died on June 11, 2012 at her home in Beverly Hills, California. \"Melody Trail\" was filmed August 21–27, 1935. The film had an operating budget of $15,075", "id": "2111015" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nHardy Family movies as a literal girl-next-door to Rooney's character Andy Hardy, in \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938), although Hardy's love interest was played by Lana Turner. They teamed as lead characters for the first time in \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), ultimately appearing in five additional films, including Hardy films \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\" (1940) and \"Life Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland stated that she, Rooney, and other young", "id": "13593082" }, { "contents": "Annie Get Your Gun (film)\n\n\n, MGM's biggest musical comedy star, was originally cast as Annie Oakley. She recorded all her songs for the soundtrack and worked for two months under the direction of Busby Berkeley and dance director Robert Alton. Berkeley and Garland had worked together previously in the late 1930s and early 1940s in a successful series of backstage musicals teaming her with fellow juvenile star Mickey Rooney. Berkeley had been fired from the Garland/Rooney musical \"Girl Crazy\" in 1943 due to personality clashes with musical director Roger Edens and for driving Garland very", "id": "13779025" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nYear for her live recording \"Judy at Carnegie Hall\" (1961). Garland began performing in vaudeville as a child with her two older sisters, and was later signed to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a teenager. Although she appeared in more than two dozen films with MGM and received acclaim for many different roles, she is often best remembered for her portrayal of Dorothy Gale in \"The Wizard of Oz\" (1939). Garland was a frequent on-screen partner of both Mickey Rooney and Gene Kelly,", "id": "13593062" }, { "contents": "Louise LaPlanche\n\n\n, portraying a gypsy girl in \"The Hunchback of Notre Dame\" in 1923. Both LaPlanche began competing in California beauty pageants. In 1939, Louise LaPlanche was crowned Miss Catalina. Her Miss Catalina win led to a film contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). She appeared in the 1940 MGM musical film, \"Strike Up the Band\", which starred Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. LaPlanche later left MGM and signed on to Paramount Studios. She was cast in several Paramount films, including 1942's", "id": "3022959" }, { "contents": "Bonita Granville\n\n\nfilm success led to Granville reprising the role in three sequels from 1938 to 1939, including \"Nancy Drew... Reporter\" (1939). As a young adult, she was once again cast in supporting roles, often in prestigious films such as \"Now, Voyager\" (1942), as well as two Andy Hardy films with Mickey Rooney, \"Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble\" (1944) and \"Love Laughs at Andy Hardy\" (1946). She is also remembered for her starring role in the World", "id": "12873960" }, { "contents": "Eve Arden\n\n\nThis was followed by roles in the crime film \"The Forgotten Woman\" (1939), and the comedy \"At the Circus\" (1939), opposite Groucho Marx, a role that would require her to perform acrobatics. In 1940, she appeared opposite Clark Gable in \"Comrade X\", followed by the drama \"Manpower\" (1941), opposite Marlene Dietrich. She also appeared in a supporting part in the Red Skelton comedy \"Whistling in the Dark\" (1941), and the romantic comedy \"", "id": "10321268" }, { "contents": "Shirley Temple\n\n\nher departure from Twentieth Century-Fox, Shirley was signed by MGM for her comeback; the studio made plans to team her with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney for the Andy Hardy series. The idea was quickly abandoned. The next idea was teaming her with Garland and Rooney for the musical \"Babes on Broadway\". Fearing that either of the latter two could easily upstage Temple, MGM replaced her with Virginia Weidler. As a result, her only film for Metro was \"Kathleen\" in 1941, a story about an", "id": "7504264" }, { "contents": "Barbara Read\n\n\ncompany. When she failed to receive any roles because of her lack of experience, she joined the Laguna Beach Players theater, where she acted in a new play each month for two years. Her first film appearance was one of the three principal girls in the 1936 comedy film \"Three Smart Girls\", which also starred Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. From 1937 through 1939, Read appeared in nine films, most notably starring in \"The Spellbinder\", opposite Lee Tracy. From 1940 through 1948, she appeared in", "id": "5406875" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy\n\n\nLife Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland's character, Betsy Booth, is an aspiring singer and she sings in the first two of these films. However, although Garland songs were planned for the final film, they were eventually dropped. Unlike Garland-Rooney films outside of the \"Andy Hardy\" series, Rooney's Hardy character is not a musician, so Garland and Rooney do not perform together in the Hardy films. Rooney played the character continuously from age 16 to 25, when he appeared in", "id": "7714497" }, { "contents": "Fay Holden\n\n\nthe depression era. Eventually they left Vancouver and moved to Hollywood. Holden appeared in 46 motion pictures between 1935 and 1958, but is best known for her recurring role as Emily Hardy, mother of Mickey Rooney's character in the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" film series. The series was enormously popular in the late 1930s and early '40s, and Holden was in 15 of the 16 Hardy movies, surpassed only by Rooney, who was in all 16. Holden is also remembered for her performance as Hazel, the mother", "id": "15552902" }, { "contents": "Margaret Early\n\n\nBrent, Bette Davis, and Fay Bainter. She later became a freelance actress and found herself working in various roles at such studios as RKO, Warner Bros., and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her other screen roles include parts in \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939), \"Strike Up The Band\" (1940), \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" (1941), and \"Stage Door Canteen\" (1943). She made her last screen appearance in \"Cinderella Jones\" (1946)", "id": "11267109" }, { "contents": "Sheila Darcy\n\n\n1935 her career had taken off, and from then until 1941 she had roles in 41 films. In most of her early films, she played the heroine in B-movies, often Westerns. Darcy's best known roles were as the female lead in cliffhangers, such as the 1939 film \"Zorro's Fighting Legion\", in which she performed opposite Reed Hadley. She also played the Dragon Lady in the serial \"Terry and the Pirates\", released in 1940. In Westerns, she often played opposite popular cowboy", "id": "21067295" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nIn 1937, Rooney made his first film alongside Judy Garland with \"Thoroughbreds Don't Cry\". Garland and Rooney became close friends as they co-starred in future films and became a successful song-and-dance team. Audiences delighted in seeing the \"playful interactions between the two stars showcase a wonderful chemistry\". Along with three of the \"Andy Hardy\" films, where she portrayed a girl attracted to Andy, they appeared together in a string of successful musicals, including \"Babes in Arms\" (1939", "id": "5690267" }, { "contents": "Brenda Marshall\n\n\nArdis Ankerson (September 29, 1915 – July 30, 1992), known as Brenda Marshall, was a Filipino-born, American film actress. Marshall made her first film appearance in the 1939 \"Espionage Agent\". The following year, she played the leading lady to Errol Flynn in \"The Sea Hawk\". After divorcing actor Richard Gaines in 1940, she married William Holden in 1941, and her own career soon slowed. She starred opposite James Cagney in \"Captains of the Clouds\" (1942).", "id": "14392731" }, { "contents": "Julie Haydon\n\n\nmade by MGM. In 1932, she signed with RKO, and her first major role came that year in \"The Conquerors\", directed by William Wellman Her most notable performance came in 1935's \"The Scoundrel\" playing opposite Noël Coward, but, despite a new contract with MGM, only a few more films were to come in her short career, including \"A Family Affair\" (1937), the initial movie in the Andy Hardy series. Some have held that it was Haydon and not Fay Wray who", "id": "19690260" }, { "contents": "Jean Darling\n\n\nAssociation. She turned down an offer to appear alongside Mickey Rooney in one of the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" movies, and went on Broadway, making her debut in the musical \"Count Me In\" in 1942. Darling's stage career hit a real high when she landed the role of Carrie Pipperidge in the original Broadway production of \"Carousel\" in 1945. She appeared in 850 consecutive performances. Her role as Carrie Pipperidge helped her with parts for radio and TV in the 1950s. She hosted her own television show", "id": "1616169" }, { "contents": "List of Lana Turner performances\n\n\nLana Turner was an American actress who appeared in over fifty films during her career, which spanned four decades. Discovered in 1937 at age 16, she signed a contract with Warner Bros. and appeared in several films for the studio before signing a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The studio's co-founder, Louis B. Mayer, helped further her career by casting her in several youth-oriented comedies and musicals, including \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941),", "id": "7891475" }, { "contents": "Marguerite Chapman\n\n\ncontract to Warner Brothers in 1941, and then with Columbia from 1942 to 1948. She made her film debut in 1940, working for the next two years in small roles. In 1942, her big break came with Republic Pictures when she was cast in the leading female role in the twelve-part adventure film serial \"Spy Smasher\", a production that has been ranked among the best serials ever made. Chapman soon began receiving more leading roles and appeared opposite important stars such as Edward G. Robinson and George Sanders.", "id": "2722471" }, { "contents": "Jeanne Cagney\n\n\nRKO Pictures. However, she signed a long-term contract with Paramount Pictures. She appeared in 19 films between 1939 and 1965, including four films with her brother James: \"Yankee Doodle Dandy\" (1942), \"The Time of Your Life\" (1948), \"A Lion Is in the Streets\" (1953), and \"Man of a Thousand Faces\" (1957). Cagney gave a noted performance opposite Mickey Rooney in the film noir crime film \"Quicksand\" (1950). Cagney", "id": "6954933" }, { "contents": "Little Annie Rooney (1925 film)\n\n\nLittle Annie Rooney is a 1925 American silent comedy-drama film starring Mary Pickford and directed by William Beaudine. Pickford, one of the most successful actresses of the silent era, was best known throughout her career for her iconic portrayals of penniless young girls. After generating only modest box office revenue playing adults in her previous two films, Pickford wrote and produced \"Little Annie Rooney\" to cater to silent film audiences. Though she was 33 years old, Pickford played the title role, an Irish girl living in the slums", "id": "236551" }, { "contents": "Edith Barrett\n\n\n, she married leading man Vincent Price in 1938. The marriage ended in 1948. She and Price had one son, author/poet and environmental activist Vincent Barrett Price (born 1940). Her biggest Broadway success was as star of the now-obscure production \"Mrs. Moonlight\". In her first film, \"Ladies in Retirement\" (1941), she played one of the two half-witted half-sisters of Ida Lupino's homicidal character. Her best remembered movie role is possibly Mrs. Holland's mother-", "id": "18853813" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\nHardy film, \"A Family Affair\", in 1937. Mickey Rooney played Andy Hardy in the series, supported by Lewis Stone, Ann Rutherford, and Fay Holden. The movies were directed by George B. Seitz. Parker's character, Marion, appeared in most of the films, and her romances were a recurring feature of the series. Though she and the character she played were absent from the last two Andy Hardy films of the 1940s, Parker came out of retirement to play Marian Hardy in one more movie,", "id": "18919252" }, { "contents": "Nancy Walker\n\n\nrole provided Walker with her film debut when she signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to make a movie version, starring Lucille Ball (filmed in 1943). In 1943, she also appeared with Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in the second film version of \"Girl Crazy\". Her next film, \"Broadway Rhythm\", in which she had a featured musical number backed by Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra, \"Milkman, Keep Those Bottles Quiet\", ended Walker's contract with Metro. Her dry comic", "id": "9657966" }, { "contents": "List of Gloria Stuart performances\n\n\nstarred in two films opposite Shirley Temple: \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936), and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938), both for 20th Century Fox. She subsequently co-starred in \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939) opposite Don Ameche. Dissatisfied with her career in film, Stuart shifted her focus to stage acting. Between 1940 and 1942, Stuart appeared in numerous summer stock plays in New England, including a 1940 production of \"Our Town\" in which she starred alongside its playwright", "id": "19503931" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nBabes in Arms is the 1939 American film version of the 1937 Broadway musical of the same name. The film version stars Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland, and features Charles Winninger, Guy Kibbee, June Preisser, Grace Hayes, and Betty Jaynes. The film concerns a group of youngsters trying to put on a show to prove their vaudevillian parents wrong and make it to Broadway. The original Broadway script was significantly revamped, restructured, and rewritten to accommodate Hollywood's needs. In 1921, vaudeville performer Joe Moran (Winninger)", "id": "9219782" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nhim when he transferred to MGM in 1938. Turner attracted attention by playing the role of a murder victim in her first film, LeRoy's \"They Won't Forget\" (1937), and she later transitioned into featured roles, often appearing as an ingénue. During the early 1940s, Turner established herself as a leading actress and one of MGM's top performers, appearing in such films as the film noir \"Johnny Eager\" (1941); the musical \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941); the horror film", "id": "11929991" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nthe stature of most leading men. He appeared in a number of films, including \"Words and Music\" in 1948, which paired him for the last time with Garland on film (he appeared with her on one episode as a guest on \"The Judy Garland Show\"). He briefly starred in a CBS radio series, \"Shorty Bell\", in the summer of 1948, and reprised his role as \"Andy Hardy\", with most of the original cast, in a syndicated radio version of \"The", "id": "5690276" }, { "contents": "Donna Reed\n\n\nmany starlets at MGM, she played Mickey Rooney's love interest in an Andy Hardy film, in her case the hugely popular \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942). She was second billed in a children's film, \"Mokey\" (1942). Reed played a love interest in \"Calling Dr. Gillespie\" (1942) and \"Apache Trail\" (1942), then did a thriller with Edward Arnold, \"Eyes in the Night\" (1942), directed by Fred Zinnemann. Reed had", "id": "13840841" }, { "contents": "Evalyn Knapp\n\n\nHis Private Secretary\", a light comedy in which Wayne portrays a suit-and-tie wearing playboy determined to win her over. She also appeared in \"Corruption\" that year opposite Preston Foster. One of her better known film roles was opposite Ken Maynard in the 1934 film \"In Old Santa Fe\" featuring Gene Autry in his first screen appearance, in which he sang with a bluegrass band. She worked through 1941, but her career slowed afterward. In 1943, she played her last role, uncredited,", "id": "560741" }, { "contents": "Kathryn Grayson\n\n\nexercise. Within a year, Grayson had her first screen test. However, the studio executives were not satisfied, and she went through a further six months of lessons until she made her first film appearance in 1941's \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" as the character's secretary Kathryn Land. In the film, she takes part in three musical numbers. Two further films were planned for Grayson in 1941; \"White House Girl\", which was later made in 1948 with Durbin, and \"Very Warm for May", "id": "20045432" }, { "contents": "Susi Nicoletti\n\n\nSusi Nicoletti (3 September 1918 – 5 June 2005) was a Bavarian-born actress best remembered today for over 100 supporting roles mostly in comedy films. She was born as Susanne Emilie Luise Adele Habersack in Munich, but spent most of her childhood with her parents in Amsterdam. Back in Munich, she made her stage debut at age 13. Two years later she became a ballerina. In the early 1930s she turned to cabaret. In 1939, she was offered her first film role. In 1940 she moved to", "id": "6091110" }, { "contents": "Dorothy Morris\n\n\nShe did a screen test for the female lead in \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942), but lost to Donna Reed. Appearing in bit parts in several of the studio's more successful films, Morris was signed to a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract in 1941. For one of her early film roles, \"Cry 'Havoc'\" (1943), she affected a British accent. Her next picture was the well-received drama \"The Human Comedy\", which featured a star cast,", "id": "323808" }, { "contents": "The Courtship of Andy Hardy\n\n\nThe Courtship of Andy Hardy is a 1942 film, part of the Andy Hardy series. It gave an early role to Donna Reed although Mickey Rooney had lobbied for his then-wife Ava Gardner to have her part. Within a few months of the film's release, she filed for divorce. This was the 12th entry in the long-running \"Andy Hardy\" series of sixteen. When Carvel teenager and new tow truck-owner Andy Hardy is stopped by a policeman for driving without a license plate, a radio", "id": "20736523" }, { "contents": "Mae Busch\n\n\nMae Busch (18 June 1891 – 20 April 1946) was an Australian-born actress who worked in both silent and sound films in early Hollywood. In the latter part of her career she appeared in many Laurel and Hardy comedies, where she frequently played Hardy's shrewish wife. Mae Busch was born Annie May Busch in Melbourne, Victoria to popular Australian vaudeville performers Elizabeth Maria Lay and Frederick William Busch. Her mother had been active since 1883 under the stage names \"Dora Devere\" and then \"Dora Busch\";", "id": "10830566" }, { "contents": "Hannelore Schroth\n\n\ndebut at the age of nine in 1931's Max Ophüls' comedy \"Dann schon lieber Lebertran\" opposite her mother. Until age sixteen she attended drama school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Her early film successes include \"Spiel im Sommerwind\" (1938), \"Weisser Flieder\" (1939) and \"Kitty und die Weltkonferenz\" (1939) - the latter of which was her first leading role. During World War II, Hannelore Schroth continued performing in films. Unlike her father, Heinrich Schroth, who was by", "id": "16153872" }, { "contents": "Lupe Vélez\n\n\npopular actress, RKO Pictures did not renew her contract in 1934. Over the next few years, Vélez worked for various studio as a freelance actress; she also spent two years in England where she filmed \"The Morals of Marcus\" and \"Gypsy Melody\" (both 1936). She returned to Los Angeles the following year where she appeared in the final part of the Wheeler & Woolsey comedy \"High Flyers\" (1937). Vélez made her final appearance on Broadway in the 1938 musical \"You Never Know\"", "id": "20716058" }, { "contents": "Katharine Kavanaugh\n\n\nher biggest claims to fame was helping to create the Jones Family characters, who would appear in 17 low-budget films between 1936 and 1940. The first film in the series, \"Every Saturday Night\", was released in 1936, and Kavanaugh would also co-write \"Educating Father\", released later that same year. While her screenwriting career cooled in the late 1930s, she continued writing plays that were produced in the Los Angeles area until her death in 1942. She and her husband, Oliver Ziegfeld (", "id": "21036559" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\n, including \"The Wizard of Oz\" and \"Babes in Arms\". She was the fourth person to receive the award as well as only one of twelve in history to ever be presented with one. Garland starred in three films released in 1940: \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\", \"Strike Up the Band\", and \"Little Nellie Kelly\". In the last, she played her first adult role, a dual role of both mother and daughter. \"Little Nellie Kelly\" was purchased from George M.", "id": "13593089" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nliving on her own. In late 1949 Hardi and her husband moved to Jakarta. Two years later she made her feature film debut in a bit role in the Produksi Film Negara (PFN; State Film Corporation)'s \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". The following year she took a starring role in another PFN film, \"Si Pintjang\", portraying an old woman; as she was only twenty-four, she was artificially aged with make-up. That same year she appeared as the lead love interest in", "id": "15623084" }, { "contents": "Jane Frazee\n\n\nB film \"Melody and Moonlight\" (1940) for Republic Pictures. Shortly after the film's release she was signed by Universal Pictures and was featured in \"Buck Privates\", the high-grossing 1941 comedy/World War II film starring Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The strong impression she made in that film elevated her to leading-lady roles in Universal's popular \"B\" musicals, usually appearing opposite Robert Paige. She left Universal in late 1942, when she married actor-director Glenn Tryon, who", "id": "11708629" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\n\n\nAndy Hardy Meets Debutante is a 1940 American romantic comedy film directed by George B. Seitz. The film stars Lewis Stone, Mickey Rooney, Cecilia Parker, Fay Holden and Judy Garland. It is the ninth of the \"Andy Hardy\" full-length film series. Andy Hardy (Mickey Rooney) from Carvel becomes infatuated with a well-known young socialite, Daphne Fowler (Diana Lewis), from New York City. Even though he hasn’t met the woman in person, he drops her name to his friends and", "id": "11382757" }, { "contents": "Martha Vickers\n\n\nplayed minor roles in several films during the early 1940s, working first at Universal Studios and then at RKO Pictures. She next went to Warner Bros., where \"they gave her the star push, rearranging her surname to 'Vickers.'\" Her work there included the role of Carmen Sternwood, the promiscuous, drug-addicted younger sister of Lauren Bacall's character in \"The Big Sleep\" (1946). She also starred in a musical, \"The Time, the Place and the Girl\", followed by", "id": "721594" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nwas over, she was summoned back to work and ultimately performed two songs as a guest in the Rodgers and Hart biopic \"Words and Music\" (1948), which was her last appearance with Mickey Rooney. Despite the all-star cast, \"Words and Music\" barely broke even at the box office. Having regained her strength, as well as some needed weight during her suspension, Garland felt much better and in the fall of 1948, she returned to MGM to replace a pregnant June Allyson for the musical", "id": "13593101" }, { "contents": "Martha O'Driscoll\n\n\n's Dangerous\" (1937), she was not credited by name. In the Deanna Durbin vehicle \"Mad About Music\" (1937), she was billed as \"pretty girl.\" Her face appeared on such advertisements as Charm-Kurl Supreme Cold Wave and Max Factor Hollywood Face Powder. Universal lent O'Driscoll to MGM for parts in \"The Secret of Dr Kildare\" (1939) and \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1940), starring Mickey Rooney. RKO, however, gave O'Driscoll her first two starring", "id": "20196774" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nMarlia Hardi (also Marlia Hardy; 10 March 192718 June 1984) was an Indonesian film actress active from 1951 to 1983. Born in the Central Javan city of Magelang, she took to the stage in the 1940s before moving to Jakarta in 1949. Two years later she made her feature film debut in \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". Over the next two decades she appeared in over seventy films, became recognized for her depictions of mothers, and received the Citra Award for Best Supporting Actress. Despite her productiveness, however", "id": "15623082" }, { "contents": "Susan Peters\n\n\nLos Angeles. After completing filming of the comedy \"Andy Hardy's Double Life\" (1942) in which she had a lead role, Mervyn LeRoy cast Peters in the drama \"Random Harvest\", in which she portrayed a young woman who falls in love with her step-uncle. The film was one of the top 25 highest-earning films of the year, and Peters's performance garnered her critical acclaim, earning her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. The success of \"Random Harvest\" led", "id": "17519590" }, { "contents": "Paulette Goddard\n\n\nshe appeared as an uncredited extra in two films, the Laurel and Hardy short film \"Berth Marks\" (1929), and George Fitzmaurice's drama \"The Locked Door\" (1929). Following her divorce, she briefly visited Europe before returning to Hollywood in late 1930 with her mother. Her second attempt at acting was no more successful than the first, as she landed work only as an extra. In 1930, she signed her first film contract with producer Samuel Goldwyn to appear as a Goldwyn Girl in \"", "id": "3980436" }, { "contents": "Trixie Friganza\n\n\nTrixie Friganza (born Delia O'Callaghan; November 29, 1870 – February 27, 1955) began her career as an operetta soubrette, working her way from the chorus to starring in musical comedies to having her own feature act on the vaudeville circuit. She transitioned to film in the early 1920s mostly playing small characters that were quirky and comedic and retired from the stage in 1940 due to health concerns. She spent her last years teaching drama to young women in a convent school and when she died she left everything to the convent", "id": "13928014" }, { "contents": "Susan Hayward\n\n\nSusan Hayward (born Edythe Marrenner; June 30, 1917 – March 14, 1975) was an American actress and model. After working as a fashion model, Hayward traveled to Hollywood in 1937. She secured a film contract and played several small supporting roles over the next few years. By the late 1940s, the quality of her film roles had improved, and she achieved recognition for her dramatic abilities with the first of five Academy Award nominations for Best Actress for her performance as an alcoholic in \"Smash-Up,", "id": "14143916" }, { "contents": "Nella Walker\n\n\nyear to 1938, she had 23 film appearances. Her biggest film appearance during this period was in \"Young Dr. Kildare\" with Lionel Barrymore and Lew Ayres. Throughout the 1930s, her career was strong, and despite never being a premier star, she repeatedly had solid acting roles. She finished the decade strongly in 1939 with nine film roles, only three of which were uncredited. The 1940s mirrored her success of the previous decade in many ways, with appearances in 37 films from 1940 to 1947. Later in her", "id": "4686869" }, { "contents": "May Wallace\n\n\nMay Wallace (August 23, 1877 – December 11, 1938) was an American film actress. She appeared in 63 films between 1914 and 1939. Wallace was born in Russiaville, Indiana and died in Los Angeles, California, where she worked in Hollywood as a film actress. She often played supporting roles for producer Hal Roach in his Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang comedies, mostly in maternal roles. Wallace was married to Thomas W. Maddox until her death, they had one daughter and one son. She died of", "id": "9169980" }, { "contents": "Ora Carew\n\n\na film editor. Ora's birth year has been listed as 1893, on her death certificate and is also what her grave says, but Utah birth index and the 1900 census indicate 1891. She was educated by private tutors and at Roland Hall Seminary. After her father died on June 19, 1896, her mother moved with her three children to California. Her screen career began with MGM, following numerous engagements in vaudeville, musical comedy and stock. Some of her most notable films with MGM were \"Go West,", "id": "19207733" }, { "contents": "Eilene Janssen\n\n\nMary Eilene Janssen (born May 25, 1938), is a retired American film and television actress. Eilene Janssen was born in Los Angeles, California on May 25, 1938, to parents Henry Janssen and Mary Ellen Thompson. She began her film career as a child actress in the early 1940s. With her father being a longtime worker for Universal Studios, Eilene Janssen made her first screen appearance in the 1940 film \"Sandy Gets Her Man\". She continued to have bit parts in several movies such as \"Two", "id": "12362318" }, { "contents": "Ann Rutherford\n\n\nLouis Mayer originally refused the loan because he considered the role too minor, but Rutherford passionately appealed to him to change his mind. In December 1939, while promoting the new movie, Rutherford visited six Confederate Army veterans at the Confederate Soldiers Home near Atlanta. One of the veterans gave Rutherford a rose corsage tied with Confederate colors. From 1937 until 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. Her first film in this series was \"You're Only Young Once\"", "id": "6472820" }, { "contents": "Gloria Stuart\n\n\nMan\" (1933), followed by roles in the Shirley Temple musicals \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936) and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938). She also starred as Queen Anne in the musical comedy \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939). Beginning in 1940, Stuart slowed her film career, instead performing in regional theater in New England. In 1945, following a tenure as a contract player for Twentieth Century Fox, Stuart abandoned her acting career and shifted to a career as an artist", "id": "3454792" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nand Judy Garland in the Andy Hardy film \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938). During the shoot, Turner completed her studies with an educational social worker, allowing her to graduate high school that year. The film was a box-office success, and her appearance in it as a flirtatious high school student convinced studio head Louis B. Mayer that Turner could be the next Jean Harlow, a sex symbol who had died six months before Turner's arrival at MGM. Mayer helped further Turner's career by giving her", "id": "11930007" }, { "contents": "Linda Darnell\n\n\nLinda Darnell (born Monetta Eloyse Darnell, October 16, 1923April 10, 1965) was an American film actress. Darnell progressed from modeling as a child to acting in theater and film. At the encouragement of her mother, she made her first film in 1939, and appeared in supporting roles in big-budget films for 20th Century Fox throughout the 1940s. She rose to fame with co-starring roles opposite Tyrone Power in adventure films, and established a main character career after her role in \"Forever Amber\" (", "id": "9752181" }, { "contents": "Marcia Mae Jones\n\n\nsigned her to co-star with Jackie Moran in a few rustic romances; when this series lapsed, both Jones and Moran joined Monogram's popular action-comedy series starring Frankie Darro. As a young adult, she continued to work in motion pictures, notably in \"Nine Girls\" (1944) and \"Arson, Inc.\" (1948). Like many familiar faces of the 1940s, she appeared on numerous television programs. In 1951 she appeared as comic foil to Buster Keaton in Keaton's filmed TV series.", "id": "5963847" }, { "contents": "Peggy Drake\n\n\nPeggy Drake (6 October 1922 – 19 September 2014), was an Austrian film and television actress. She primarily appeared in B-movies of the 1940s. Born Lieselotte Mayer in Vienna, Austria, she moved to the United States with her family at the age of three. Her acting career started with an uncredited role in the film \"Too Many Girls\" (1940). Her career was short-lived, appearing in five films between 1940 and 1942, most notably in the serial film \"King of the", "id": "8901594" }, { "contents": "Signe Hasso\n\n\nfilm in Sweden. In 1933, she made her first film, \"Tystnadens hus\", with German film director/cameraman Harry Hasso, whom she married the same year. They had a son by the time she was 19. They divorced in 1941. In 1940, she moved to the United States, where she signed a contract with RKO Pictures, who promoted her as \"the next Garbo\". With few RKO roles forthcoming, she turned to the stage to make a living. According to the Internet Broadway", "id": "19347089" }, { "contents": "Rita La Roy\n\n\nand the \"cobra dance\" in which her feet and legs were tied together under a stylized snakeskin so that she danced by undulating her torso.\" In 1929, she made her film debut in \"The Delightful Rogue\", starring opposite matinee idol Rod La Rocque. Over the next several years, working as part of the RKO Radio Pictures stable, she appeared in both starring and supporting roles. While her final significant role was in the 1940 comedy-mystery \"Hold That Woman!\", she had several small", "id": "13534727" }, { "contents": "Elizabeth Taylor\n\n\nto socially prominent American parents, Taylor moved with her family to Los Angeles in 1939. She made her acting debut in a minor role in the Universal Pictures film \"There's One Born Every Minute\" (1942) but the studio ended her contract after a year. She was then signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and became a popular teen star after appearing in \"National Velvet\" (1944). She transitioned to more mature roles in the 1950s, when she starred in the comedy \"Father of the", "id": "19979789" }, { "contents": "Karin Booth\n\n\nKarin Booth (born June Francis Hoffman, June 19, 1916 – July 27, 2003) was an American film and TV actress of the 1940s to 1960s. She was born June Francis Hoffman on June 19, 1916, in Minneapolis, Minnesota to Francis T. and Ebba V. Hoffman. She lived in Portland and Los Angeles, attending John Marshall High School. She began her career modeling and being a chorus girl in 1939 and was signed under contract to Paramount Pictures in 1941 under the name Katharine Booth. After changing her", "id": "1386964" }, { "contents": "Saranya Ponvannan\n\n\ndebut in Mani Ratnam's production \"Nayakan,\" as the female lead opposite Kamal Haasan in 1987. She made her first Telugu appearance in 1988 film \"Neerajanam;\" her Malayalam debut was a year later in the 1989 film \"Artham\" starring opposite Mamooty. In 1996 almost during the end of her career as a lead actress she debuted in Kannada cinema in \"Appaji\". After marriage in 1995, she semi retired from acting. In 2000 she appeared playing the lead role in the comedy television series, \"", "id": "2557700" }, { "contents": "Franciska Gaal\n\n\n\", opposite Fredric March. She followed this with the comedy \"The Girl Downstairs\" (1938) with Franchot Tone, a remake of her Austrian success \"Catherine the Last\". In 1939, Gaal co-starred with Bing Crosby in the musical \"Paris Honeymoon\". She returned to Hungary in 1940 because of her mother's illness and remained there for the duration of World War II. In 1946, she began work on a new film in Budapest the Soviet-backed \"Renee XIV\" but filming was", "id": "19308441" }, { "contents": "Jo Ann Sayers\n\n\nstudent production and invited her to Hollywood for a screen test. She was offered a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her first credited film role was in 1938. In 1940, she was selected for the titular role in the Broadway production of \"My Sister Eileen\", opposite Shirley Booth, who was two decades Sayers' senior, which opened on December 26, 1940. She remained in the Broadway cast until June 1942, when she left to marry Anthony A. Bliss (1913-1991), a New", "id": "6389492" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nstar Baby Rosalie Essex (June Preisser), but Mickey gets in a fight with Jeff. Mickey tells Judge Black that his parents' show flopped. The judge gives Mickey 30 days to pay damages. Don and Molly sing \"Where or When\" with an orchestra of children. Mickey has a date with Baby and dines in her house. Mickey wants Baby in the show, which needs $287. She offers to pay it. Mickey smokes a cigar and leaves sick. Mickey tells Patsy that Baby has to play", "id": "9219785" }, { "contents": "Chela Ruiz\n\n\nChela Ruiz (5 June 1921 - 1 December 1999) was an Argentine actress. Her career spanned radio, film, television and stage, and in 1997 the Argentine Association of Actors awarded her the prestigious Premio Podestá for her theatrical work. Ruiz made her professional debut on Radio Splendid, along with her sister Nora Cullen, working as an actress and reader. In the 1940s and 1950s she was known for her narration of radio plays by Nené Cascallar. She began appearing on stage in 1942. A film career followed later", "id": "10450238" }, { "contents": "Petula Clark\n\n\nher film career in the late 1960s, starring in two big musical films. In \"Finian's Rainbow\" (1968), she starred opposite Fred Astaire and she was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for her performance. With her role, she again made history by becoming Astaire's final on-screen dance partner. The following year she was cast with Peter O'Toole in \"Goodbye, Mr. Chips\" (1969), a musical adaptation of the classic James Hilton novella", "id": "19868394" }, { "contents": "Sara Haden\n\n\n\". Haden later became a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract player in the late 1930s and had smallish roles in many of the studio's films, most notably in the Andy Hardy series starring Mickey Rooney, cast as the spinsterish Aunt Milly Forrest. Haden made her last film, \"Andy Hardy Comes Home\", in 1958, but was active on television until a 1965 guest spot on \"Dr. Kildare\". She was most notable for her stern, humorless characterisations such as a truant officer in Shirley Temple's \"", "id": "16961173" }, { "contents": "Rafaela Ottiano\n\n\n's last film was the musical comedy \"I Married an Angel\" (1942), starring Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. During her career in film, she appeared in approximately 45 motion pictures, opposite such actors as Barbara Stanwyck, Conrad Nagel, Peter Lorre, Zasu Pitts, and Katharine Hepburn. Ottiano lived in the Times Square area during the Prohibition Era and never married. She died in 1942, in the Boston home of her late parents, of intestinal cancer at the age of 54. She is buried at", "id": "9444719" }, { "contents": "Doris Davenport\n\n\nDoris Davenport, also known as Doris Jordan (January 1, 1917 – June 18, 1980) was an American film actress during the 1930s and early 1940s. Davenport was born in Moline, Illinois, but raised in Hollywood, California. She started auditioning for acting roles, and performed in her first film in 1934, titled \"Kid Millions\". From 1934 to 1939, she appeared in only five films, supporting herself by working in New York City as a fashion model between films. However, when she auditioned", "id": "2801211" }, { "contents": "Patricia Dane\n\n\nPatricia Dane (born Thelma Pearl Pippins, August 4, 1919 – June 5, 1995) was an American film actress of the 1940s. Dane was born Thelma Pearl Pippins in Blountstown, Florida and was also known as Thelma Byrnes after her stepfather. She began her career designing clothes for a New York City dress firm and was signed to an MGM contract in 1941. Dane's earliest appearances were two uncredited roles in \"Ziegfeld Girl\" and \"I'll Wait for You\" (both 1941). She played the", "id": "18013995" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\na young girl. Her new contract called for a starting salary of $75 a week and scales up to $1000 a week for the seventh year. In November 1935, Parker purchased a new home in Beverly Hills, California. The following year she joined the ballet school of Dave Gould at MGM, along with Maureen O'Sullivan. By the fall of 1936, Parker was studying singing. She played Marian Hardy in the extremely popular Andy Hardy film series in the late 1930s and early 1940s. She was in the original", "id": "18919251" }, { "contents": "Rooney Mara\n\n\nwas always afraid that I might fail.\" Her first and only role in high school was Juliet in \"Romeo and Juliet\", which she got after being signed up to audition by a friend. Mara acted in a few student films while at NYU, and then began her career in acting, first auditioning at the age of nineteen. Mara first appeared as an extra in films which starred her sister, including a bit-part in the 2005 direct-to-video horror film \"\". She found work", "id": "18311311" }, { "contents": "Georgiana Young\n\n\nBelzer and Gladys Royal. Along with her half-sisters, she was raised Roman Catholic. Young's acting career was short-lived, though she appeared in three films. Her debut role was as Berta Hubbard, sister of Mabel Gardiner Hubbard, in Irving Cummings's 1939 biographical film \"The Story of Alexander Graham Bell\", opposite her sisters Loretta (as Mabel), Sally, and Polly Ann. She would later have bit parts in two other films: \"No, No, Nanette\" (1940)", "id": "6269969" }, { "contents": "Glikeriya Bogdanova-Chesnokova\n\n\nmedals for her service. Following the war, in 1946, Bogdanova-Chesnokova returned to the Leningrad State Theatre of Musical Comedy. In 1947, she received the Stalin Prize. In the mid 1950s, Bogdanova-Chesnokova performed during three circus seasons with the clown, The act involved acrobatic actions. In 1955, Bogdanova-Chesnokova made her first significant film appearance. She played Maria Mikhailovna in the comedy film \"Tamer of Tigers\". Generally, Bogdanova-Chesnokova was a character actress taking supporting roles. However, in", "id": "5458931" }, { "contents": "Judi West\n\n\nJudi West (born December 15, 1942) is an American actress, best known for her supporting role opposite Jack Lemmon in the 1966 comedy film \"The Fortune Cookie. Judi West acted in a few films in the 1960s and also appeared in television in the 1960s through the early 1980s. Her notable film appearances include: She had earlier worked on the Broadway stage including \"A Family Affair\" (1962) and \"She Loves Me\" (1963-1964). Married from 1971 to 1989 to actor John Rubinstein", "id": "5957659" }, { "contents": "Judy Holliday\n\n\nJudy Holliday (born Judith Tuvim, June 21, 1921 – June 7, 1965) was an American actress, comedian, and singer. She began her career as part of a nightclub act before working in Broadway plays and musicals. Her success in the 1946 stage production of \"Born Yesterday\" as Billie Dawn led to her being cast in the 1950 film version for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. She appeared in several films", "id": "15453399" }, { "contents": "Elena Lucena\n\n\nMaría Elena Lucena Arcuri (25 September 1914 – 7 October 2015) was an Argentine film actress of the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema (1940–60). She began her career in radio in the 1930s and reached her greatest success with the role of \"Chimbela\", which was later depicted in film, theater and television. Her extensive film career includes approximately 50 films, including notable performances in \"Chimbela\" (1939) and \"Una noche cualquiera\" (1951). During the 1940s she participated in films with comedians", "id": "16119436" }, { "contents": "Florence Nash\n\n\nLynch in \"Within the Law\". She was a noted theater actor and comedian in vaudeville until the 1930s (appearing in sketches including \"In 1999\"), when she moved to Hollywood to try her luck with films. Her most notable role was as \"Nancy Blake\" in the 1939 MGM blockbuster \"The Women\". She also was the author of a book of verse, \"June Dusk\", published in 1918. After her retirement from acting in 1939, she spent the next decade living comfortably in", "id": "6401074" }, { "contents": "Doris Nolan\n\n\nher jitters, the show was a success and Nolan got positive reviews. When Nolan left the play, Woods sent her back to Hollywood, getting her a contract with Universal Pictures. She continued to move back and forth between movies and theater throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Her most prominent film appearance was in the 1938 version of \"Holiday\", where she played alongside Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Her subsequent film roles went downhill, but she reinvigorated her Broadway career with an 18-month stint in \"The Doughgirls\",", "id": "14779965" }, { "contents": "Marjorie Stapp\n\n\nMarjorie Stapp (September 17, 1921 – June 2, 2014), was an American actress who was mainly in low-budget pictures. Stapp began her film career when she signed a contract with the film studio 20th Century-Fox in the 1940s. Her first screen appearance was in \"The Kid from Brooklyn\", a 1946 film starring Danny Kaye. This was followed by another minor appearance in \"Linda, Be Good\" (1947). Eventually, she landed a leading role in the Western movie \"The", "id": "3140505" }, { "contents": "Roshini (actress)\n\n\nRoshini is an Indian film actress who has worked in the Telugu and Tamil film industries. She is the younger sister actress Jyothika and half sister to Nagma. After getting a recommendation by her sister Nagma, Roshini made her acting debut in Selva's comedy film \"Sishya\", where she played the lead role alongside Karthik. She subsequently starred in \"Master\" (1997), opposite Chiranjeevi. Roshini was keen to accept performance-orientated roles and turned down several offers in late 1997 to be a part of films in", "id": "12724581" }, { "contents": "Lola Albright\n\n\nmotion picture debut with a small singing role in the 1947 musical comedy \"The Unfinished Dance\" and then appeared the following year in two Judy Garland movies: \"The Pirate\" and \"Easter Parade\". She first gained studio and public notice in the 1949 film noir production \"Champion\" with her portrayal of the wife of a manipulative boxing manager; she falls for a prizefighter played by Kirk Douglas. For the next several years, she appeared in secondary roles in over 20 films, including several B westerns. Among", "id": "18089616" }, { "contents": "Marika Rökk\n\n\nthe 1930s and 1940s. She had the technical skill and glamour to carry off the formulaic plots and dialogue and provide German audiences with a home grown star to rival the popular American actresses. \"Der Bettelstudent\" and \"Gasparone\", followed by \"Hello Janine!\" in 1939, all starred her together with Johannes Heesters and established them as the \"dream couple\" of the musical comedy genre. In her appearances she cultivated her \"magyar\" accent conveying a notion of \"paprika\" exoticism. Her films, which", "id": "9061566" }, { "contents": "Fay Wray\n\n\nShe continued to star in various films, including \"The Richest Girl in the World\", a second film with Joel McCrea, but by the early 1940s, her appearances became less frequent. She retired from acting in 1942 after her second marriage but due to financial exigencies soon resumed her acting career, and over the next three decades, Wray appeared in several films and also frequently on television. Wray was cast in the 1953-54 ABC situation comedy \"The Pride of the Family\" as Catherine Morrison. Paul Hartman", "id": "10781506" }, { "contents": "Margaret O'Brien\n\n\n(1944), opposite Judy Garland. As Tootie Smith, the feisty but fragile little sister of Judy Garland, she was a bright point in a very good film, especially in her musical numbers with Garland and during a Halloween sequence in which she confronts a grouchy neighbor. For her performance, she was awarded a special juvenile Oscar in 1944. Margaret and June Allyson were known as \"The Town Criers\" of MGM. \"We were always in competition: I wanted to cry better than June, and June wanted", "id": "7504217" }, { "contents": "Ann Sothern\n\n\nSothern appeared in two musical films in 1948, \"April Showers\" opposite Jack Carson and \"Words and Music\" starring an all-star cast of MGM actors, singers and dancers. In 1949, she appeared in the Academy Award-winning film \"A Letter to Three Wives\" for 20th Century Fox. Sothern received excellent reviews for her performance but the acclaim failed to stimulate her career, which had begun to wane in the late 1940s. In 1949, Sothern contracted hepatitis which she would battle for the next three", "id": "2026182" }, { "contents": "Jane Isbell\n\n\nWar soldier who once saved the life of Andrew Jackson. Clark Isbell's father was also a cousin of Alabama Governor William J. Samford. The Isbells moved to Los Angeles when Jane was an infant. The elder of two sisters, she began modeling and appearing as an extra in films when only four years old. In 1932, she made her first Mickey McGuire comedy starring Mickey Rooney and would eventually make five films in the Mickey McGuire series, similar to the Our Gang films. She grew up with child stars for playmates", "id": "12640286" }, { "contents": "Shirley Palmer (actress)\n\n\n1930 she appeared with Dorothy Sebastian and Neil Hamilton in \"Ladies Must Play\", her only film of that year. In 1932 she appeared in \"This Sporting Age\", and in 1933 she starred in probably her most recognizable role, starring opposite John Wayne in \"Somewhere in Sonora\". It would be her last credited role. She had two uncredited roles following that film, one the same year and the other in 1934, after which her career ended. She married once, to writer John Collier, and", "id": "3797930" }, { "contents": "Betty Grable\n\n\n(1930), starring Eddie Cantor. Although she received no on-screen credit for her performance, she led the film's opening musical number, entitled \"Cowboys\". In 1932, she signed a contract with RKO Radio Pictures, and she was assigned to a succession of acting, singing, and dancing classes at the studio's drama school. Her first film for the studio, \"Probation\" (1932), provided the 14-year-old Grable with her first credited screen role. Over the next few years", "id": "17559458" }, { "contents": "Erika Jayne\n\n\n, and pink.\" Soon after she gave birth to a son, Thomas Zizzo, Jr. After the couple divorced a few years later, she relocated to Los Angeles to pursue her dream of becoming a singer and performer. Early in her career, Girardi worked as a waitress to support herself between acting jobs. Girardi began her acting career in the early 1990s by appearing in small roles in several American television series and films. Her first on-screen appearance was a role as Suzanne Morton in the episode \"Prescription for", "id": "22006264" }, { "contents": "Thelma Scott\n\n\nThelma Scott (17 June 1913 – 23 November 2006) was an Australian character actress and television director whose 70-year career in theatre, radio, film and Australian television made her one of her country's most recognizable and beloved personalities. Having started her career in the early 1930s in theatre and film productions, she became one of the nation's biggest radio performers, during the 1940s featuring in productions such as \"Big Sister\" and \"Blue Hills\". She returned to made for TV films in the early late 1950s and", "id": "7852633" } ]
June Preisser ( June 26 , 1920 -- September 19 , 1984 ) was an American actress , briefly popular in musical films during the late 1930s and early 1940s , many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat . Born in New Orleans , Louisiana , Preisser was one of six children , and was an underweight baby . Her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age , in an attempt to build her strength . There she , and her sister Cherry , learnt acrobatics . Their mother was keen to have them follow a career in showbusiness , especially when their father died suddenly , leaving the family with few options to make a living . When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home , and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville , and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936 . The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States , and also performed in Europe , most notably for . Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage , and June was signed to a film contract by . Her first film Dancing Co-Ed ( 1939 ) provided only a small part , but her next film , Babes in Arms ( 1939 ) , gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland . She performed with Rooney and Garland again in Strike Up the Band ( 1940 ) , and with Rooney in two " Andy Hardy " films , Judge Hardy and Son ( 1939 ) and Andy Hardy 's Private Secretary ( 1941 ) . Gallant Sons ( 1940 ) placed her in a comedic murder mystery , and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in ( 1941 ) , and followed this with Sweater Girl ( 1942 ) , opposite Eddie Bracken . She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry , and the birth of a son , Ricky . By this time , MGM had little interest in promoting her , and she left to work for Monogram Pictures . She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years , and played the character " Dodie Rogers " in seven " high school " comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948 . Her final film was ( 1948 ) , and after appearing in a [START_ENT] Los Angeles [END_ENT] theater production of Annie Get Your Gun
39f947a1-cb33-4121-9e9e-6276f09c0732_June_Preisse:15
[{"answer": "Los Angeles", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "18110", "title": "Los Angeles"}]}]
[ { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n, and June was signed to a film contract by MGM. Her first film, \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), provided only a small part, but her next film, \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. She performed with Rooney and Garland again in \"Strike Up the Band\" (1940), and with Rooney in two \"Andy Hardy\" films, \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939) and \"Andy Hardy", "id": "17067760" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nJune Preisser (June 26, 1920 – September 19, 1984) was an American actress, popular in musical films during the late 1930s and through the 1940s, many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat. Born in New Orleans, Preisser was one of six children. An underweight child, her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age, in an attempt to build her strength. There she, and her sister Cherry, learned acrobatics. Their mother was keen to have them follow a career", "id": "17067758" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n's Private Secretary\" (1941). \"Gallant Sons\" (1940) placed her in a comedic murder mystery, and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in \"Henry Aldrich for President\" (1941), and followed this with \"Sweater Girl\" (1942), opposite Eddie Bracken. She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry, and the birth of a son, Ricky. By this time, MGM had little interest in promoting her, and she left to work", "id": "17067761" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nfor Monogram Pictures. She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years, and played the character \"Dodie Rogers\" in seven \"high school\" comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948. Her final film was Music Man (1948), and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of \"Annie Get Your Gun\", she retired from acting. She divorced not long after, and taught dancing and acrobatics in Los Angeles, before moving with her son to Florida. They", "id": "17067762" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nin show business, especially when their father died suddenly, leaving the family with few options to make a living. When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home, and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville, and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936. The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States, and also performed in Europe, most notably for George VI of the United Kingdom. Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage", "id": "17067759" }, { "contents": "Melody Trail\n\n\nand Prejudice\" (1940). In 1939, she played the role of Carreen O'Hara, the sister of Scarlet O'Hara, in the film \"Gone with the Wind\". From 1937 to 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. She retired from films in 1950. Rutherford died on June 11, 2012 at her home in Beverly Hills, California. \"Melody Trail\" was filmed August 21–27, 1935. The film had an operating budget of $15,075", "id": "2111015" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nHardy Family movies as a literal girl-next-door to Rooney's character Andy Hardy, in \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938), although Hardy's love interest was played by Lana Turner. They teamed as lead characters for the first time in \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), ultimately appearing in five additional films, including Hardy films \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\" (1940) and \"Life Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland stated that she, Rooney, and other young", "id": "13593082" }, { "contents": "Annie Get Your Gun (film)\n\n\n, MGM's biggest musical comedy star, was originally cast as Annie Oakley. She recorded all her songs for the soundtrack and worked for two months under the direction of Busby Berkeley and dance director Robert Alton. Berkeley and Garland had worked together previously in the late 1930s and early 1940s in a successful series of backstage musicals teaming her with fellow juvenile star Mickey Rooney. Berkeley had been fired from the Garland/Rooney musical \"Girl Crazy\" in 1943 due to personality clashes with musical director Roger Edens and for driving Garland very", "id": "13779025" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nYear for her live recording \"Judy at Carnegie Hall\" (1961). Garland began performing in vaudeville as a child with her two older sisters, and was later signed to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a teenager. Although she appeared in more than two dozen films with MGM and received acclaim for many different roles, she is often best remembered for her portrayal of Dorothy Gale in \"The Wizard of Oz\" (1939). Garland was a frequent on-screen partner of both Mickey Rooney and Gene Kelly,", "id": "13593062" }, { "contents": "Louise LaPlanche\n\n\n, portraying a gypsy girl in \"The Hunchback of Notre Dame\" in 1923. Both LaPlanche began competing in California beauty pageants. In 1939, Louise LaPlanche was crowned Miss Catalina. Her Miss Catalina win led to a film contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). She appeared in the 1940 MGM musical film, \"Strike Up the Band\", which starred Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. LaPlanche later left MGM and signed on to Paramount Studios. She was cast in several Paramount films, including 1942's", "id": "3022959" }, { "contents": "Bonita Granville\n\n\nfilm success led to Granville reprising the role in three sequels from 1938 to 1939, including \"Nancy Drew... Reporter\" (1939). As a young adult, she was once again cast in supporting roles, often in prestigious films such as \"Now, Voyager\" (1942), as well as two Andy Hardy films with Mickey Rooney, \"Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble\" (1944) and \"Love Laughs at Andy Hardy\" (1946). She is also remembered for her starring role in the World", "id": "12873960" }, { "contents": "Eve Arden\n\n\nThis was followed by roles in the crime film \"The Forgotten Woman\" (1939), and the comedy \"At the Circus\" (1939), opposite Groucho Marx, a role that would require her to perform acrobatics. In 1940, she appeared opposite Clark Gable in \"Comrade X\", followed by the drama \"Manpower\" (1941), opposite Marlene Dietrich. She also appeared in a supporting part in the Red Skelton comedy \"Whistling in the Dark\" (1941), and the romantic comedy \"", "id": "10321268" }, { "contents": "Shirley Temple\n\n\nher departure from Twentieth Century-Fox, Shirley was signed by MGM for her comeback; the studio made plans to team her with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney for the Andy Hardy series. The idea was quickly abandoned. The next idea was teaming her with Garland and Rooney for the musical \"Babes on Broadway\". Fearing that either of the latter two could easily upstage Temple, MGM replaced her with Virginia Weidler. As a result, her only film for Metro was \"Kathleen\" in 1941, a story about an", "id": "7504264" }, { "contents": "Barbara Read\n\n\ncompany. When she failed to receive any roles because of her lack of experience, she joined the Laguna Beach Players theater, where she acted in a new play each month for two years. Her first film appearance was one of the three principal girls in the 1936 comedy film \"Three Smart Girls\", which also starred Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. From 1937 through 1939, Read appeared in nine films, most notably starring in \"The Spellbinder\", opposite Lee Tracy. From 1940 through 1948, she appeared in", "id": "5406875" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy\n\n\nLife Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland's character, Betsy Booth, is an aspiring singer and she sings in the first two of these films. However, although Garland songs were planned for the final film, they were eventually dropped. Unlike Garland-Rooney films outside of the \"Andy Hardy\" series, Rooney's Hardy character is not a musician, so Garland and Rooney do not perform together in the Hardy films. Rooney played the character continuously from age 16 to 25, when he appeared in", "id": "7714497" }, { "contents": "Fay Holden\n\n\nthe depression era. Eventually they left Vancouver and moved to Hollywood. Holden appeared in 46 motion pictures between 1935 and 1958, but is best known for her recurring role as Emily Hardy, mother of Mickey Rooney's character in the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" film series. The series was enormously popular in the late 1930s and early '40s, and Holden was in 15 of the 16 Hardy movies, surpassed only by Rooney, who was in all 16. Holden is also remembered for her performance as Hazel, the mother", "id": "15552902" }, { "contents": "Margaret Early\n\n\nBrent, Bette Davis, and Fay Bainter. She later became a freelance actress and found herself working in various roles at such studios as RKO, Warner Bros., and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her other screen roles include parts in \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939), \"Strike Up The Band\" (1940), \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" (1941), and \"Stage Door Canteen\" (1943). She made her last screen appearance in \"Cinderella Jones\" (1946)", "id": "11267109" }, { "contents": "Sheila Darcy\n\n\n1935 her career had taken off, and from then until 1941 she had roles in 41 films. In most of her early films, she played the heroine in B-movies, often Westerns. Darcy's best known roles were as the female lead in cliffhangers, such as the 1939 film \"Zorro's Fighting Legion\", in which she performed opposite Reed Hadley. She also played the Dragon Lady in the serial \"Terry and the Pirates\", released in 1940. In Westerns, she often played opposite popular cowboy", "id": "21067295" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nIn 1937, Rooney made his first film alongside Judy Garland with \"Thoroughbreds Don't Cry\". Garland and Rooney became close friends as they co-starred in future films and became a successful song-and-dance team. Audiences delighted in seeing the \"playful interactions between the two stars showcase a wonderful chemistry\". Along with three of the \"Andy Hardy\" films, where she portrayed a girl attracted to Andy, they appeared together in a string of successful musicals, including \"Babes in Arms\" (1939", "id": "5690267" }, { "contents": "Brenda Marshall\n\n\nArdis Ankerson (September 29, 1915 – July 30, 1992), known as Brenda Marshall, was a Filipino-born, American film actress. Marshall made her first film appearance in the 1939 \"Espionage Agent\". The following year, she played the leading lady to Errol Flynn in \"The Sea Hawk\". After divorcing actor Richard Gaines in 1940, she married William Holden in 1941, and her own career soon slowed. She starred opposite James Cagney in \"Captains of the Clouds\" (1942).", "id": "14392731" }, { "contents": "Julie Haydon\n\n\nmade by MGM. In 1932, she signed with RKO, and her first major role came that year in \"The Conquerors\", directed by William Wellman Her most notable performance came in 1935's \"The Scoundrel\" playing opposite Noël Coward, but, despite a new contract with MGM, only a few more films were to come in her short career, including \"A Family Affair\" (1937), the initial movie in the Andy Hardy series. Some have held that it was Haydon and not Fay Wray who", "id": "19690260" }, { "contents": "Jean Darling\n\n\nAssociation. She turned down an offer to appear alongside Mickey Rooney in one of the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" movies, and went on Broadway, making her debut in the musical \"Count Me In\" in 1942. Darling's stage career hit a real high when she landed the role of Carrie Pipperidge in the original Broadway production of \"Carousel\" in 1945. She appeared in 850 consecutive performances. Her role as Carrie Pipperidge helped her with parts for radio and TV in the 1950s. She hosted her own television show", "id": "1616169" }, { "contents": "List of Lana Turner performances\n\n\nLana Turner was an American actress who appeared in over fifty films during her career, which spanned four decades. Discovered in 1937 at age 16, she signed a contract with Warner Bros. and appeared in several films for the studio before signing a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The studio's co-founder, Louis B. Mayer, helped further her career by casting her in several youth-oriented comedies and musicals, including \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941),", "id": "7891475" }, { "contents": "Marguerite Chapman\n\n\ncontract to Warner Brothers in 1941, and then with Columbia from 1942 to 1948. She made her film debut in 1940, working for the next two years in small roles. In 1942, her big break came with Republic Pictures when she was cast in the leading female role in the twelve-part adventure film serial \"Spy Smasher\", a production that has been ranked among the best serials ever made. Chapman soon began receiving more leading roles and appeared opposite important stars such as Edward G. Robinson and George Sanders.", "id": "2722471" }, { "contents": "Jeanne Cagney\n\n\nRKO Pictures. However, she signed a long-term contract with Paramount Pictures. She appeared in 19 films between 1939 and 1965, including four films with her brother James: \"Yankee Doodle Dandy\" (1942), \"The Time of Your Life\" (1948), \"A Lion Is in the Streets\" (1953), and \"Man of a Thousand Faces\" (1957). Cagney gave a noted performance opposite Mickey Rooney in the film noir crime film \"Quicksand\" (1950). Cagney", "id": "6954933" }, { "contents": "Little Annie Rooney (1925 film)\n\n\nLittle Annie Rooney is a 1925 American silent comedy-drama film starring Mary Pickford and directed by William Beaudine. Pickford, one of the most successful actresses of the silent era, was best known throughout her career for her iconic portrayals of penniless young girls. After generating only modest box office revenue playing adults in her previous two films, Pickford wrote and produced \"Little Annie Rooney\" to cater to silent film audiences. Though she was 33 years old, Pickford played the title role, an Irish girl living in the slums", "id": "236551" }, { "contents": "Edith Barrett\n\n\n, she married leading man Vincent Price in 1938. The marriage ended in 1948. She and Price had one son, author/poet and environmental activist Vincent Barrett Price (born 1940). Her biggest Broadway success was as star of the now-obscure production \"Mrs. Moonlight\". In her first film, \"Ladies in Retirement\" (1941), she played one of the two half-witted half-sisters of Ida Lupino's homicidal character. Her best remembered movie role is possibly Mrs. Holland's mother-", "id": "18853813" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\nHardy film, \"A Family Affair\", in 1937. Mickey Rooney played Andy Hardy in the series, supported by Lewis Stone, Ann Rutherford, and Fay Holden. The movies were directed by George B. Seitz. Parker's character, Marion, appeared in most of the films, and her romances were a recurring feature of the series. Though she and the character she played were absent from the last two Andy Hardy films of the 1940s, Parker came out of retirement to play Marian Hardy in one more movie,", "id": "18919252" }, { "contents": "Nancy Walker\n\n\nrole provided Walker with her film debut when she signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to make a movie version, starring Lucille Ball (filmed in 1943). In 1943, she also appeared with Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in the second film version of \"Girl Crazy\". Her next film, \"Broadway Rhythm\", in which she had a featured musical number backed by Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra, \"Milkman, Keep Those Bottles Quiet\", ended Walker's contract with Metro. Her dry comic", "id": "9657966" }, { "contents": "List of Gloria Stuart performances\n\n\nstarred in two films opposite Shirley Temple: \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936), and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938), both for 20th Century Fox. She subsequently co-starred in \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939) opposite Don Ameche. Dissatisfied with her career in film, Stuart shifted her focus to stage acting. Between 1940 and 1942, Stuart appeared in numerous summer stock plays in New England, including a 1940 production of \"Our Town\" in which she starred alongside its playwright", "id": "19503931" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nBabes in Arms is the 1939 American film version of the 1937 Broadway musical of the same name. The film version stars Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland, and features Charles Winninger, Guy Kibbee, June Preisser, Grace Hayes, and Betty Jaynes. The film concerns a group of youngsters trying to put on a show to prove their vaudevillian parents wrong and make it to Broadway. The original Broadway script was significantly revamped, restructured, and rewritten to accommodate Hollywood's needs. In 1921, vaudeville performer Joe Moran (Winninger)", "id": "9219782" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nhim when he transferred to MGM in 1938. Turner attracted attention by playing the role of a murder victim in her first film, LeRoy's \"They Won't Forget\" (1937), and she later transitioned into featured roles, often appearing as an ingénue. During the early 1940s, Turner established herself as a leading actress and one of MGM's top performers, appearing in such films as the film noir \"Johnny Eager\" (1941); the musical \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941); the horror film", "id": "11929991" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nthe stature of most leading men. He appeared in a number of films, including \"Words and Music\" in 1948, which paired him for the last time with Garland on film (he appeared with her on one episode as a guest on \"The Judy Garland Show\"). He briefly starred in a CBS radio series, \"Shorty Bell\", in the summer of 1948, and reprised his role as \"Andy Hardy\", with most of the original cast, in a syndicated radio version of \"The", "id": "5690276" }, { "contents": "Donna Reed\n\n\nmany starlets at MGM, she played Mickey Rooney's love interest in an Andy Hardy film, in her case the hugely popular \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942). She was second billed in a children's film, \"Mokey\" (1942). Reed played a love interest in \"Calling Dr. Gillespie\" (1942) and \"Apache Trail\" (1942), then did a thriller with Edward Arnold, \"Eyes in the Night\" (1942), directed by Fred Zinnemann. Reed had", "id": "13840841" }, { "contents": "Evalyn Knapp\n\n\nHis Private Secretary\", a light comedy in which Wayne portrays a suit-and-tie wearing playboy determined to win her over. She also appeared in \"Corruption\" that year opposite Preston Foster. One of her better known film roles was opposite Ken Maynard in the 1934 film \"In Old Santa Fe\" featuring Gene Autry in his first screen appearance, in which he sang with a bluegrass band. She worked through 1941, but her career slowed afterward. In 1943, she played her last role, uncredited,", "id": "560741" }, { "contents": "Kathryn Grayson\n\n\nexercise. Within a year, Grayson had her first screen test. However, the studio executives were not satisfied, and she went through a further six months of lessons until she made her first film appearance in 1941's \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" as the character's secretary Kathryn Land. In the film, she takes part in three musical numbers. Two further films were planned for Grayson in 1941; \"White House Girl\", which was later made in 1948 with Durbin, and \"Very Warm for May", "id": "20045432" }, { "contents": "Susi Nicoletti\n\n\nSusi Nicoletti (3 September 1918 – 5 June 2005) was a Bavarian-born actress best remembered today for over 100 supporting roles mostly in comedy films. She was born as Susanne Emilie Luise Adele Habersack in Munich, but spent most of her childhood with her parents in Amsterdam. Back in Munich, she made her stage debut at age 13. Two years later she became a ballerina. In the early 1930s she turned to cabaret. In 1939, she was offered her first film role. In 1940 she moved to", "id": "6091110" }, { "contents": "Dorothy Morris\n\n\nShe did a screen test for the female lead in \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942), but lost to Donna Reed. Appearing in bit parts in several of the studio's more successful films, Morris was signed to a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract in 1941. For one of her early film roles, \"Cry 'Havoc'\" (1943), she affected a British accent. Her next picture was the well-received drama \"The Human Comedy\", which featured a star cast,", "id": "323808" }, { "contents": "The Courtship of Andy Hardy\n\n\nThe Courtship of Andy Hardy is a 1942 film, part of the Andy Hardy series. It gave an early role to Donna Reed although Mickey Rooney had lobbied for his then-wife Ava Gardner to have her part. Within a few months of the film's release, she filed for divorce. This was the 12th entry in the long-running \"Andy Hardy\" series of sixteen. When Carvel teenager and new tow truck-owner Andy Hardy is stopped by a policeman for driving without a license plate, a radio", "id": "20736523" }, { "contents": "Mae Busch\n\n\nMae Busch (18 June 1891 – 20 April 1946) was an Australian-born actress who worked in both silent and sound films in early Hollywood. In the latter part of her career she appeared in many Laurel and Hardy comedies, where she frequently played Hardy's shrewish wife. Mae Busch was born Annie May Busch in Melbourne, Victoria to popular Australian vaudeville performers Elizabeth Maria Lay and Frederick William Busch. Her mother had been active since 1883 under the stage names \"Dora Devere\" and then \"Dora Busch\";", "id": "10830566" }, { "contents": "Hannelore Schroth\n\n\ndebut at the age of nine in 1931's Max Ophüls' comedy \"Dann schon lieber Lebertran\" opposite her mother. Until age sixteen she attended drama school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Her early film successes include \"Spiel im Sommerwind\" (1938), \"Weisser Flieder\" (1939) and \"Kitty und die Weltkonferenz\" (1939) - the latter of which was her first leading role. During World War II, Hannelore Schroth continued performing in films. Unlike her father, Heinrich Schroth, who was by", "id": "16153872" }, { "contents": "Lupe Vélez\n\n\npopular actress, RKO Pictures did not renew her contract in 1934. Over the next few years, Vélez worked for various studio as a freelance actress; she also spent two years in England where she filmed \"The Morals of Marcus\" and \"Gypsy Melody\" (both 1936). She returned to Los Angeles the following year where she appeared in the final part of the Wheeler & Woolsey comedy \"High Flyers\" (1937). Vélez made her final appearance on Broadway in the 1938 musical \"You Never Know\"", "id": "20716058" }, { "contents": "Katharine Kavanaugh\n\n\nher biggest claims to fame was helping to create the Jones Family characters, who would appear in 17 low-budget films between 1936 and 1940. The first film in the series, \"Every Saturday Night\", was released in 1936, and Kavanaugh would also co-write \"Educating Father\", released later that same year. While her screenwriting career cooled in the late 1930s, she continued writing plays that were produced in the Los Angeles area until her death in 1942. She and her husband, Oliver Ziegfeld (", "id": "21036559" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\n, including \"The Wizard of Oz\" and \"Babes in Arms\". She was the fourth person to receive the award as well as only one of twelve in history to ever be presented with one. Garland starred in three films released in 1940: \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\", \"Strike Up the Band\", and \"Little Nellie Kelly\". In the last, she played her first adult role, a dual role of both mother and daughter. \"Little Nellie Kelly\" was purchased from George M.", "id": "13593089" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nliving on her own. In late 1949 Hardi and her husband moved to Jakarta. Two years later she made her feature film debut in a bit role in the Produksi Film Negara (PFN; State Film Corporation)'s \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". The following year she took a starring role in another PFN film, \"Si Pintjang\", portraying an old woman; as she was only twenty-four, she was artificially aged with make-up. That same year she appeared as the lead love interest in", "id": "15623084" }, { "contents": "Jane Frazee\n\n\nB film \"Melody and Moonlight\" (1940) for Republic Pictures. Shortly after the film's release she was signed by Universal Pictures and was featured in \"Buck Privates\", the high-grossing 1941 comedy/World War II film starring Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The strong impression she made in that film elevated her to leading-lady roles in Universal's popular \"B\" musicals, usually appearing opposite Robert Paige. She left Universal in late 1942, when she married actor-director Glenn Tryon, who", "id": "11708629" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\n\n\nAndy Hardy Meets Debutante is a 1940 American romantic comedy film directed by George B. Seitz. The film stars Lewis Stone, Mickey Rooney, Cecilia Parker, Fay Holden and Judy Garland. It is the ninth of the \"Andy Hardy\" full-length film series. Andy Hardy (Mickey Rooney) from Carvel becomes infatuated with a well-known young socialite, Daphne Fowler (Diana Lewis), from New York City. Even though he hasn’t met the woman in person, he drops her name to his friends and", "id": "11382757" }, { "contents": "Martha Vickers\n\n\nplayed minor roles in several films during the early 1940s, working first at Universal Studios and then at RKO Pictures. She next went to Warner Bros., where \"they gave her the star push, rearranging her surname to 'Vickers.'\" Her work there included the role of Carmen Sternwood, the promiscuous, drug-addicted younger sister of Lauren Bacall's character in \"The Big Sleep\" (1946). She also starred in a musical, \"The Time, the Place and the Girl\", followed by", "id": "721594" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nwas over, she was summoned back to work and ultimately performed two songs as a guest in the Rodgers and Hart biopic \"Words and Music\" (1948), which was her last appearance with Mickey Rooney. Despite the all-star cast, \"Words and Music\" barely broke even at the box office. Having regained her strength, as well as some needed weight during her suspension, Garland felt much better and in the fall of 1948, she returned to MGM to replace a pregnant June Allyson for the musical", "id": "13593101" }, { "contents": "Martha O'Driscoll\n\n\n's Dangerous\" (1937), she was not credited by name. In the Deanna Durbin vehicle \"Mad About Music\" (1937), she was billed as \"pretty girl.\" Her face appeared on such advertisements as Charm-Kurl Supreme Cold Wave and Max Factor Hollywood Face Powder. Universal lent O'Driscoll to MGM for parts in \"The Secret of Dr Kildare\" (1939) and \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1940), starring Mickey Rooney. RKO, however, gave O'Driscoll her first two starring", "id": "20196774" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nMarlia Hardi (also Marlia Hardy; 10 March 192718 June 1984) was an Indonesian film actress active from 1951 to 1983. Born in the Central Javan city of Magelang, she took to the stage in the 1940s before moving to Jakarta in 1949. Two years later she made her feature film debut in \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". Over the next two decades she appeared in over seventy films, became recognized for her depictions of mothers, and received the Citra Award for Best Supporting Actress. Despite her productiveness, however", "id": "15623082" }, { "contents": "Susan Peters\n\n\nLos Angeles. After completing filming of the comedy \"Andy Hardy's Double Life\" (1942) in which she had a lead role, Mervyn LeRoy cast Peters in the drama \"Random Harvest\", in which she portrayed a young woman who falls in love with her step-uncle. The film was one of the top 25 highest-earning films of the year, and Peters's performance garnered her critical acclaim, earning her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. The success of \"Random Harvest\" led", "id": "17519590" }, { "contents": "Paulette Goddard\n\n\nshe appeared as an uncredited extra in two films, the Laurel and Hardy short film \"Berth Marks\" (1929), and George Fitzmaurice's drama \"The Locked Door\" (1929). Following her divorce, she briefly visited Europe before returning to Hollywood in late 1930 with her mother. Her second attempt at acting was no more successful than the first, as she landed work only as an extra. In 1930, she signed her first film contract with producer Samuel Goldwyn to appear as a Goldwyn Girl in \"", "id": "3980436" }, { "contents": "Trixie Friganza\n\n\nTrixie Friganza (born Delia O'Callaghan; November 29, 1870 – February 27, 1955) began her career as an operetta soubrette, working her way from the chorus to starring in musical comedies to having her own feature act on the vaudeville circuit. She transitioned to film in the early 1920s mostly playing small characters that were quirky and comedic and retired from the stage in 1940 due to health concerns. She spent her last years teaching drama to young women in a convent school and when she died she left everything to the convent", "id": "13928014" }, { "contents": "Susan Hayward\n\n\nSusan Hayward (born Edythe Marrenner; June 30, 1917 – March 14, 1975) was an American actress and model. After working as a fashion model, Hayward traveled to Hollywood in 1937. She secured a film contract and played several small supporting roles over the next few years. By the late 1940s, the quality of her film roles had improved, and she achieved recognition for her dramatic abilities with the first of five Academy Award nominations for Best Actress for her performance as an alcoholic in \"Smash-Up,", "id": "14143916" }, { "contents": "Nella Walker\n\n\nyear to 1938, she had 23 film appearances. Her biggest film appearance during this period was in \"Young Dr. Kildare\" with Lionel Barrymore and Lew Ayres. Throughout the 1930s, her career was strong, and despite never being a premier star, she repeatedly had solid acting roles. She finished the decade strongly in 1939 with nine film roles, only three of which were uncredited. The 1940s mirrored her success of the previous decade in many ways, with appearances in 37 films from 1940 to 1947. Later in her", "id": "4686869" }, { "contents": "May Wallace\n\n\nMay Wallace (August 23, 1877 – December 11, 1938) was an American film actress. She appeared in 63 films between 1914 and 1939. Wallace was born in Russiaville, Indiana and died in Los Angeles, California, where she worked in Hollywood as a film actress. She often played supporting roles for producer Hal Roach in his Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang comedies, mostly in maternal roles. Wallace was married to Thomas W. Maddox until her death, they had one daughter and one son. She died of", "id": "9169980" }, { "contents": "Ora Carew\n\n\na film editor. Ora's birth year has been listed as 1893, on her death certificate and is also what her grave says, but Utah birth index and the 1900 census indicate 1891. She was educated by private tutors and at Roland Hall Seminary. After her father died on June 19, 1896, her mother moved with her three children to California. Her screen career began with MGM, following numerous engagements in vaudeville, musical comedy and stock. Some of her most notable films with MGM were \"Go West,", "id": "19207733" }, { "contents": "Eilene Janssen\n\n\nMary Eilene Janssen (born May 25, 1938), is a retired American film and television actress. Eilene Janssen was born in Los Angeles, California on May 25, 1938, to parents Henry Janssen and Mary Ellen Thompson. She began her film career as a child actress in the early 1940s. With her father being a longtime worker for Universal Studios, Eilene Janssen made her first screen appearance in the 1940 film \"Sandy Gets Her Man\". She continued to have bit parts in several movies such as \"Two", "id": "12362318" }, { "contents": "Ann Rutherford\n\n\nLouis Mayer originally refused the loan because he considered the role too minor, but Rutherford passionately appealed to him to change his mind. In December 1939, while promoting the new movie, Rutherford visited six Confederate Army veterans at the Confederate Soldiers Home near Atlanta. One of the veterans gave Rutherford a rose corsage tied with Confederate colors. From 1937 until 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. Her first film in this series was \"You're Only Young Once\"", "id": "6472820" }, { "contents": "Gloria Stuart\n\n\nMan\" (1933), followed by roles in the Shirley Temple musicals \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936) and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938). She also starred as Queen Anne in the musical comedy \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939). Beginning in 1940, Stuart slowed her film career, instead performing in regional theater in New England. In 1945, following a tenure as a contract player for Twentieth Century Fox, Stuart abandoned her acting career and shifted to a career as an artist", "id": "3454792" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nand Judy Garland in the Andy Hardy film \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938). During the shoot, Turner completed her studies with an educational social worker, allowing her to graduate high school that year. The film was a box-office success, and her appearance in it as a flirtatious high school student convinced studio head Louis B. Mayer that Turner could be the next Jean Harlow, a sex symbol who had died six months before Turner's arrival at MGM. Mayer helped further Turner's career by giving her", "id": "11930007" }, { "contents": "Linda Darnell\n\n\nLinda Darnell (born Monetta Eloyse Darnell, October 16, 1923April 10, 1965) was an American film actress. Darnell progressed from modeling as a child to acting in theater and film. At the encouragement of her mother, she made her first film in 1939, and appeared in supporting roles in big-budget films for 20th Century Fox throughout the 1940s. She rose to fame with co-starring roles opposite Tyrone Power in adventure films, and established a main character career after her role in \"Forever Amber\" (", "id": "9752181" }, { "contents": "Marcia Mae Jones\n\n\nsigned her to co-star with Jackie Moran in a few rustic romances; when this series lapsed, both Jones and Moran joined Monogram's popular action-comedy series starring Frankie Darro. As a young adult, she continued to work in motion pictures, notably in \"Nine Girls\" (1944) and \"Arson, Inc.\" (1948). Like many familiar faces of the 1940s, she appeared on numerous television programs. In 1951 she appeared as comic foil to Buster Keaton in Keaton's filmed TV series.", "id": "5963847" }, { "contents": "Peggy Drake\n\n\nPeggy Drake (6 October 1922 – 19 September 2014), was an Austrian film and television actress. She primarily appeared in B-movies of the 1940s. Born Lieselotte Mayer in Vienna, Austria, she moved to the United States with her family at the age of three. Her acting career started with an uncredited role in the film \"Too Many Girls\" (1940). Her career was short-lived, appearing in five films between 1940 and 1942, most notably in the serial film \"King of the", "id": "8901594" }, { "contents": "Signe Hasso\n\n\nfilm in Sweden. In 1933, she made her first film, \"Tystnadens hus\", with German film director/cameraman Harry Hasso, whom she married the same year. They had a son by the time she was 19. They divorced in 1941. In 1940, she moved to the United States, where she signed a contract with RKO Pictures, who promoted her as \"the next Garbo\". With few RKO roles forthcoming, she turned to the stage to make a living. According to the Internet Broadway", "id": "19347089" }, { "contents": "Rita La Roy\n\n\nand the \"cobra dance\" in which her feet and legs were tied together under a stylized snakeskin so that she danced by undulating her torso.\" In 1929, she made her film debut in \"The Delightful Rogue\", starring opposite matinee idol Rod La Rocque. Over the next several years, working as part of the RKO Radio Pictures stable, she appeared in both starring and supporting roles. While her final significant role was in the 1940 comedy-mystery \"Hold That Woman!\", she had several small", "id": "13534727" }, { "contents": "Elizabeth Taylor\n\n\nto socially prominent American parents, Taylor moved with her family to Los Angeles in 1939. She made her acting debut in a minor role in the Universal Pictures film \"There's One Born Every Minute\" (1942) but the studio ended her contract after a year. She was then signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and became a popular teen star after appearing in \"National Velvet\" (1944). She transitioned to more mature roles in the 1950s, when she starred in the comedy \"Father of the", "id": "19979789" }, { "contents": "Karin Booth\n\n\nKarin Booth (born June Francis Hoffman, June 19, 1916 – July 27, 2003) was an American film and TV actress of the 1940s to 1960s. She was born June Francis Hoffman on June 19, 1916, in Minneapolis, Minnesota to Francis T. and Ebba V. Hoffman. She lived in Portland and Los Angeles, attending John Marshall High School. She began her career modeling and being a chorus girl in 1939 and was signed under contract to Paramount Pictures in 1941 under the name Katharine Booth. After changing her", "id": "1386964" }, { "contents": "Saranya Ponvannan\n\n\ndebut in Mani Ratnam's production \"Nayakan,\" as the female lead opposite Kamal Haasan in 1987. She made her first Telugu appearance in 1988 film \"Neerajanam;\" her Malayalam debut was a year later in the 1989 film \"Artham\" starring opposite Mamooty. In 1996 almost during the end of her career as a lead actress she debuted in Kannada cinema in \"Appaji\". After marriage in 1995, she semi retired from acting. In 2000 she appeared playing the lead role in the comedy television series, \"", "id": "2557700" }, { "contents": "Franciska Gaal\n\n\n\", opposite Fredric March. She followed this with the comedy \"The Girl Downstairs\" (1938) with Franchot Tone, a remake of her Austrian success \"Catherine the Last\". In 1939, Gaal co-starred with Bing Crosby in the musical \"Paris Honeymoon\". She returned to Hungary in 1940 because of her mother's illness and remained there for the duration of World War II. In 1946, she began work on a new film in Budapest the Soviet-backed \"Renee XIV\" but filming was", "id": "19308441" }, { "contents": "Jo Ann Sayers\n\n\nstudent production and invited her to Hollywood for a screen test. She was offered a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her first credited film role was in 1938. In 1940, she was selected for the titular role in the Broadway production of \"My Sister Eileen\", opposite Shirley Booth, who was two decades Sayers' senior, which opened on December 26, 1940. She remained in the Broadway cast until June 1942, when she left to marry Anthony A. Bliss (1913-1991), a New", "id": "6389492" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nstar Baby Rosalie Essex (June Preisser), but Mickey gets in a fight with Jeff. Mickey tells Judge Black that his parents' show flopped. The judge gives Mickey 30 days to pay damages. Don and Molly sing \"Where or When\" with an orchestra of children. Mickey has a date with Baby and dines in her house. Mickey wants Baby in the show, which needs $287. She offers to pay it. Mickey smokes a cigar and leaves sick. Mickey tells Patsy that Baby has to play", "id": "9219785" }, { "contents": "Chela Ruiz\n\n\nChela Ruiz (5 June 1921 - 1 December 1999) was an Argentine actress. Her career spanned radio, film, television and stage, and in 1997 the Argentine Association of Actors awarded her the prestigious Premio Podestá for her theatrical work. Ruiz made her professional debut on Radio Splendid, along with her sister Nora Cullen, working as an actress and reader. In the 1940s and 1950s she was known for her narration of radio plays by Nené Cascallar. She began appearing on stage in 1942. A film career followed later", "id": "10450238" }, { "contents": "Petula Clark\n\n\nher film career in the late 1960s, starring in two big musical films. In \"Finian's Rainbow\" (1968), she starred opposite Fred Astaire and she was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for her performance. With her role, she again made history by becoming Astaire's final on-screen dance partner. The following year she was cast with Peter O'Toole in \"Goodbye, Mr. Chips\" (1969), a musical adaptation of the classic James Hilton novella", "id": "19868394" }, { "contents": "Sara Haden\n\n\n\". Haden later became a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract player in the late 1930s and had smallish roles in many of the studio's films, most notably in the Andy Hardy series starring Mickey Rooney, cast as the spinsterish Aunt Milly Forrest. Haden made her last film, \"Andy Hardy Comes Home\", in 1958, but was active on television until a 1965 guest spot on \"Dr. Kildare\". She was most notable for her stern, humorless characterisations such as a truant officer in Shirley Temple's \"", "id": "16961173" }, { "contents": "Rafaela Ottiano\n\n\n's last film was the musical comedy \"I Married an Angel\" (1942), starring Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. During her career in film, she appeared in approximately 45 motion pictures, opposite such actors as Barbara Stanwyck, Conrad Nagel, Peter Lorre, Zasu Pitts, and Katharine Hepburn. Ottiano lived in the Times Square area during the Prohibition Era and never married. She died in 1942, in the Boston home of her late parents, of intestinal cancer at the age of 54. She is buried at", "id": "9444719" }, { "contents": "Doris Davenport\n\n\nDoris Davenport, also known as Doris Jordan (January 1, 1917 – June 18, 1980) was an American film actress during the 1930s and early 1940s. Davenport was born in Moline, Illinois, but raised in Hollywood, California. She started auditioning for acting roles, and performed in her first film in 1934, titled \"Kid Millions\". From 1934 to 1939, she appeared in only five films, supporting herself by working in New York City as a fashion model between films. However, when she auditioned", "id": "2801211" }, { "contents": "Patricia Dane\n\n\nPatricia Dane (born Thelma Pearl Pippins, August 4, 1919 – June 5, 1995) was an American film actress of the 1940s. Dane was born Thelma Pearl Pippins in Blountstown, Florida and was also known as Thelma Byrnes after her stepfather. She began her career designing clothes for a New York City dress firm and was signed to an MGM contract in 1941. Dane's earliest appearances were two uncredited roles in \"Ziegfeld Girl\" and \"I'll Wait for You\" (both 1941). She played the", "id": "18013995" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\na young girl. Her new contract called for a starting salary of $75 a week and scales up to $1000 a week for the seventh year. In November 1935, Parker purchased a new home in Beverly Hills, California. The following year she joined the ballet school of Dave Gould at MGM, along with Maureen O'Sullivan. By the fall of 1936, Parker was studying singing. She played Marian Hardy in the extremely popular Andy Hardy film series in the late 1930s and early 1940s. She was in the original", "id": "18919251" }, { "contents": "Rooney Mara\n\n\nwas always afraid that I might fail.\" Her first and only role in high school was Juliet in \"Romeo and Juliet\", which she got after being signed up to audition by a friend. Mara acted in a few student films while at NYU, and then began her career in acting, first auditioning at the age of nineteen. Mara first appeared as an extra in films which starred her sister, including a bit-part in the 2005 direct-to-video horror film \"\". She found work", "id": "18311311" }, { "contents": "Georgiana Young\n\n\nBelzer and Gladys Royal. Along with her half-sisters, she was raised Roman Catholic. Young's acting career was short-lived, though she appeared in three films. Her debut role was as Berta Hubbard, sister of Mabel Gardiner Hubbard, in Irving Cummings's 1939 biographical film \"The Story of Alexander Graham Bell\", opposite her sisters Loretta (as Mabel), Sally, and Polly Ann. She would later have bit parts in two other films: \"No, No, Nanette\" (1940)", "id": "6269969" }, { "contents": "Glikeriya Bogdanova-Chesnokova\n\n\nmedals for her service. Following the war, in 1946, Bogdanova-Chesnokova returned to the Leningrad State Theatre of Musical Comedy. In 1947, she received the Stalin Prize. In the mid 1950s, Bogdanova-Chesnokova performed during three circus seasons with the clown, The act involved acrobatic actions. In 1955, Bogdanova-Chesnokova made her first significant film appearance. She played Maria Mikhailovna in the comedy film \"Tamer of Tigers\". Generally, Bogdanova-Chesnokova was a character actress taking supporting roles. However, in", "id": "5458931" }, { "contents": "Judi West\n\n\nJudi West (born December 15, 1942) is an American actress, best known for her supporting role opposite Jack Lemmon in the 1966 comedy film \"The Fortune Cookie. Judi West acted in a few films in the 1960s and also appeared in television in the 1960s through the early 1980s. Her notable film appearances include: She had earlier worked on the Broadway stage including \"A Family Affair\" (1962) and \"She Loves Me\" (1963-1964). Married from 1971 to 1989 to actor John Rubinstein", "id": "5957659" }, { "contents": "Judy Holliday\n\n\nJudy Holliday (born Judith Tuvim, June 21, 1921 – June 7, 1965) was an American actress, comedian, and singer. She began her career as part of a nightclub act before working in Broadway plays and musicals. Her success in the 1946 stage production of \"Born Yesterday\" as Billie Dawn led to her being cast in the 1950 film version for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. She appeared in several films", "id": "15453399" }, { "contents": "Elena Lucena\n\n\nMaría Elena Lucena Arcuri (25 September 1914 – 7 October 2015) was an Argentine film actress of the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema (1940–60). She began her career in radio in the 1930s and reached her greatest success with the role of \"Chimbela\", which was later depicted in film, theater and television. Her extensive film career includes approximately 50 films, including notable performances in \"Chimbela\" (1939) and \"Una noche cualquiera\" (1951). During the 1940s she participated in films with comedians", "id": "16119436" }, { "contents": "Florence Nash\n\n\nLynch in \"Within the Law\". She was a noted theater actor and comedian in vaudeville until the 1930s (appearing in sketches including \"In 1999\"), when she moved to Hollywood to try her luck with films. Her most notable role was as \"Nancy Blake\" in the 1939 MGM blockbuster \"The Women\". She also was the author of a book of verse, \"June Dusk\", published in 1918. After her retirement from acting in 1939, she spent the next decade living comfortably in", "id": "6401074" }, { "contents": "Doris Nolan\n\n\nher jitters, the show was a success and Nolan got positive reviews. When Nolan left the play, Woods sent her back to Hollywood, getting her a contract with Universal Pictures. She continued to move back and forth between movies and theater throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Her most prominent film appearance was in the 1938 version of \"Holiday\", where she played alongside Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Her subsequent film roles went downhill, but she reinvigorated her Broadway career with an 18-month stint in \"The Doughgirls\",", "id": "14779965" }, { "contents": "Marjorie Stapp\n\n\nMarjorie Stapp (September 17, 1921 – June 2, 2014), was an American actress who was mainly in low-budget pictures. Stapp began her film career when she signed a contract with the film studio 20th Century-Fox in the 1940s. Her first screen appearance was in \"The Kid from Brooklyn\", a 1946 film starring Danny Kaye. This was followed by another minor appearance in \"Linda, Be Good\" (1947). Eventually, she landed a leading role in the Western movie \"The", "id": "3140505" }, { "contents": "Roshini (actress)\n\n\nRoshini is an Indian film actress who has worked in the Telugu and Tamil film industries. She is the younger sister actress Jyothika and half sister to Nagma. After getting a recommendation by her sister Nagma, Roshini made her acting debut in Selva's comedy film \"Sishya\", where she played the lead role alongside Karthik. She subsequently starred in \"Master\" (1997), opposite Chiranjeevi. Roshini was keen to accept performance-orientated roles and turned down several offers in late 1997 to be a part of films in", "id": "12724581" }, { "contents": "Lola Albright\n\n\nmotion picture debut with a small singing role in the 1947 musical comedy \"The Unfinished Dance\" and then appeared the following year in two Judy Garland movies: \"The Pirate\" and \"Easter Parade\". She first gained studio and public notice in the 1949 film noir production \"Champion\" with her portrayal of the wife of a manipulative boxing manager; she falls for a prizefighter played by Kirk Douglas. For the next several years, she appeared in secondary roles in over 20 films, including several B westerns. Among", "id": "18089616" }, { "contents": "Marika Rökk\n\n\nthe 1930s and 1940s. She had the technical skill and glamour to carry off the formulaic plots and dialogue and provide German audiences with a home grown star to rival the popular American actresses. \"Der Bettelstudent\" and \"Gasparone\", followed by \"Hello Janine!\" in 1939, all starred her together with Johannes Heesters and established them as the \"dream couple\" of the musical comedy genre. In her appearances she cultivated her \"magyar\" accent conveying a notion of \"paprika\" exoticism. Her films, which", "id": "9061566" }, { "contents": "Fay Wray\n\n\nShe continued to star in various films, including \"The Richest Girl in the World\", a second film with Joel McCrea, but by the early 1940s, her appearances became less frequent. She retired from acting in 1942 after her second marriage but due to financial exigencies soon resumed her acting career, and over the next three decades, Wray appeared in several films and also frequently on television. Wray was cast in the 1953-54 ABC situation comedy \"The Pride of the Family\" as Catherine Morrison. Paul Hartman", "id": "10781506" }, { "contents": "Margaret O'Brien\n\n\n(1944), opposite Judy Garland. As Tootie Smith, the feisty but fragile little sister of Judy Garland, she was a bright point in a very good film, especially in her musical numbers with Garland and during a Halloween sequence in which she confronts a grouchy neighbor. For her performance, she was awarded a special juvenile Oscar in 1944. Margaret and June Allyson were known as \"The Town Criers\" of MGM. \"We were always in competition: I wanted to cry better than June, and June wanted", "id": "7504217" }, { "contents": "Ann Sothern\n\n\nSothern appeared in two musical films in 1948, \"April Showers\" opposite Jack Carson and \"Words and Music\" starring an all-star cast of MGM actors, singers and dancers. In 1949, she appeared in the Academy Award-winning film \"A Letter to Three Wives\" for 20th Century Fox. Sothern received excellent reviews for her performance but the acclaim failed to stimulate her career, which had begun to wane in the late 1940s. In 1949, Sothern contracted hepatitis which she would battle for the next three", "id": "2026182" }, { "contents": "Jane Isbell\n\n\nWar soldier who once saved the life of Andrew Jackson. Clark Isbell's father was also a cousin of Alabama Governor William J. Samford. The Isbells moved to Los Angeles when Jane was an infant. The elder of two sisters, she began modeling and appearing as an extra in films when only four years old. In 1932, she made her first Mickey McGuire comedy starring Mickey Rooney and would eventually make five films in the Mickey McGuire series, similar to the Our Gang films. She grew up with child stars for playmates", "id": "12640286" }, { "contents": "Shirley Palmer (actress)\n\n\n1930 she appeared with Dorothy Sebastian and Neil Hamilton in \"Ladies Must Play\", her only film of that year. In 1932 she appeared in \"This Sporting Age\", and in 1933 she starred in probably her most recognizable role, starring opposite John Wayne in \"Somewhere in Sonora\". It would be her last credited role. She had two uncredited roles following that film, one the same year and the other in 1934, after which her career ended. She married once, to writer John Collier, and", "id": "3797930" }, { "contents": "Betty Grable\n\n\n(1930), starring Eddie Cantor. Although she received no on-screen credit for her performance, she led the film's opening musical number, entitled \"Cowboys\". In 1932, she signed a contract with RKO Radio Pictures, and she was assigned to a succession of acting, singing, and dancing classes at the studio's drama school. Her first film for the studio, \"Probation\" (1932), provided the 14-year-old Grable with her first credited screen role. Over the next few years", "id": "17559458" }, { "contents": "Erika Jayne\n\n\n, and pink.\" Soon after she gave birth to a son, Thomas Zizzo, Jr. After the couple divorced a few years later, she relocated to Los Angeles to pursue her dream of becoming a singer and performer. Early in her career, Girardi worked as a waitress to support herself between acting jobs. Girardi began her acting career in the early 1990s by appearing in small roles in several American television series and films. Her first on-screen appearance was a role as Suzanne Morton in the episode \"Prescription for", "id": "22006264" }, { "contents": "Thelma Scott\n\n\nThelma Scott (17 June 1913 – 23 November 2006) was an Australian character actress and television director whose 70-year career in theatre, radio, film and Australian television made her one of her country's most recognizable and beloved personalities. Having started her career in the early 1930s in theatre and film productions, she became one of the nation's biggest radio performers, during the 1940s featuring in productions such as \"Big Sister\" and \"Blue Hills\". She returned to made for TV films in the early late 1950s and", "id": "7852633" } ]
June Preisser ( June 26 , 1920 -- September 19 , 1984 ) was an American actress , briefly popular in musical films during the late 1930s and early 1940s , many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat . Born in New Orleans , Louisiana , Preisser was one of six children , and was an underweight baby . Her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age , in an attempt to build her strength . There she , and her sister Cherry , learnt acrobatics . Their mother was keen to have them follow a career in showbusiness , especially when their father died suddenly , leaving the family with few options to make a living . When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home , and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville , and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936 . The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States , and also performed in Europe , most notably for . Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage , and June was signed to a film contract by . Her first film Dancing Co-Ed ( 1939 ) provided only a small part , but her next film , Babes in Arms ( 1939 ) , gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland . She performed with Rooney and Garland again in Strike Up the Band ( 1940 ) , and with Rooney in two " Andy Hardy " films , Judge Hardy and Son ( 1939 ) and Andy Hardy 's Private Secretary ( 1941 ) . Gallant Sons ( 1940 ) placed her in a comedic murder mystery , and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in ( 1941 ) , and followed this with Sweater Girl ( 1942 ) , opposite Eddie Bracken . She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry , and the birth of a son , Ricky . By this time , MGM had little interest in promoting her , and she left to work for Monogram Pictures . She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years , and played the character " Dodie Rogers " in seven " high school " comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948 . Her final film was ( 1948 ) , and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of [START_ENT] Annie Get Your Gun [END_ENT]
d532b360-b30a-450c-a5f0-03e8a86a30f9_June_Preisse:16
[{"answer": "Annie Get Your Gun (musical)", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "286348", "title": "Annie Get Your Gun (musical)"}]}]
[ { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n, and June was signed to a film contract by MGM. Her first film, \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), provided only a small part, but her next film, \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), gave her a significant role opposite Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. She performed with Rooney and Garland again in \"Strike Up the Band\" (1940), and with Rooney in two \"Andy Hardy\" films, \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939) and \"Andy Hardy", "id": "17067760" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nJune Preisser (June 26, 1920 – September 19, 1984) was an American actress, popular in musical films during the late 1930s and through the 1940s, many of which capitalized on her skills as an acrobat. Born in New Orleans, Preisser was one of six children. An underweight child, her parents sent her to an athletic club at an early age, in an attempt to build her strength. There she, and her sister Cherry, learned acrobatics. Their mother was keen to have them follow a career", "id": "17067758" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\n's Private Secretary\" (1941). \"Gallant Sons\" (1940) placed her in a comedic murder mystery, and she played her first lead role opposite Jimmy Lydon in \"Henry Aldrich for President\" (1941), and followed this with \"Sweater Girl\" (1942), opposite Eddie Bracken. She continued her career following her marriage in 1942 to J. Moss Terry, and the birth of a son, Ricky. By this time, MGM had little interest in promoting her, and she left to work", "id": "17067761" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nfor Monogram Pictures. She continued to appear in musical comedies over the next few years, and played the character \"Dodie Rogers\" in seven \"high school\" comedy films with Frankie Darro and Noel Neill from 1946 to 1948. Her final film was Music Man (1948), and after appearing in a Los Angeles theater production of \"Annie Get Your Gun\", she retired from acting. She divorced not long after, and taught dancing and acrobatics in Los Angeles, before moving with her son to Florida. They", "id": "17067762" }, { "contents": "June Preisser\n\n\nin show business, especially when their father died suddenly, leaving the family with few options to make a living. When Preisser was nine years old an actor noticed the two sisters performing acrobatics on a sidewalk near their home, and his interest in them eventually led to them working in vaudeville, and later for the Ziegfeld Follies in 1934 and 1936. The Preisser sisters were successful in the United States, and also performed in Europe, most notably for George VI of the United Kingdom. Cherry retired in 1938 following her marriage", "id": "17067759" }, { "contents": "Melody Trail\n\n\nand Prejudice\" (1940). In 1939, she played the role of Carreen O'Hara, the sister of Scarlet O'Hara, in the film \"Gone with the Wind\". From 1937 to 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. She retired from films in 1950. Rutherford died on June 11, 2012 at her home in Beverly Hills, California. \"Melody Trail\" was filmed August 21–27, 1935. The film had an operating budget of $15,075", "id": "2111015" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nHardy Family movies as a literal girl-next-door to Rooney's character Andy Hardy, in \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938), although Hardy's love interest was played by Lana Turner. They teamed as lead characters for the first time in \"Babes in Arms\" (1939), ultimately appearing in five additional films, including Hardy films \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\" (1940) and \"Life Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland stated that she, Rooney, and other young", "id": "13593082" }, { "contents": "Annie Get Your Gun (film)\n\n\n, MGM's biggest musical comedy star, was originally cast as Annie Oakley. She recorded all her songs for the soundtrack and worked for two months under the direction of Busby Berkeley and dance director Robert Alton. Berkeley and Garland had worked together previously in the late 1930s and early 1940s in a successful series of backstage musicals teaming her with fellow juvenile star Mickey Rooney. Berkeley had been fired from the Garland/Rooney musical \"Girl Crazy\" in 1943 due to personality clashes with musical director Roger Edens and for driving Garland very", "id": "13779025" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nYear for her live recording \"Judy at Carnegie Hall\" (1961). Garland began performing in vaudeville as a child with her two older sisters, and was later signed to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a teenager. Although she appeared in more than two dozen films with MGM and received acclaim for many different roles, she is often best remembered for her portrayal of Dorothy Gale in \"The Wizard of Oz\" (1939). Garland was a frequent on-screen partner of both Mickey Rooney and Gene Kelly,", "id": "13593062" }, { "contents": "Louise LaPlanche\n\n\n, portraying a gypsy girl in \"The Hunchback of Notre Dame\" in 1923. Both LaPlanche began competing in California beauty pageants. In 1939, Louise LaPlanche was crowned Miss Catalina. Her Miss Catalina win led to a film contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). She appeared in the 1940 MGM musical film, \"Strike Up the Band\", which starred Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. LaPlanche later left MGM and signed on to Paramount Studios. She was cast in several Paramount films, including 1942's", "id": "3022959" }, { "contents": "Bonita Granville\n\n\nfilm success led to Granville reprising the role in three sequels from 1938 to 1939, including \"Nancy Drew... Reporter\" (1939). As a young adult, she was once again cast in supporting roles, often in prestigious films such as \"Now, Voyager\" (1942), as well as two Andy Hardy films with Mickey Rooney, \"Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble\" (1944) and \"Love Laughs at Andy Hardy\" (1946). She is also remembered for her starring role in the World", "id": "12873960" }, { "contents": "Eve Arden\n\n\nThis was followed by roles in the crime film \"The Forgotten Woman\" (1939), and the comedy \"At the Circus\" (1939), opposite Groucho Marx, a role that would require her to perform acrobatics. In 1940, she appeared opposite Clark Gable in \"Comrade X\", followed by the drama \"Manpower\" (1941), opposite Marlene Dietrich. She also appeared in a supporting part in the Red Skelton comedy \"Whistling in the Dark\" (1941), and the romantic comedy \"", "id": "10321268" }, { "contents": "Shirley Temple\n\n\nher departure from Twentieth Century-Fox, Shirley was signed by MGM for her comeback; the studio made plans to team her with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney for the Andy Hardy series. The idea was quickly abandoned. The next idea was teaming her with Garland and Rooney for the musical \"Babes on Broadway\". Fearing that either of the latter two could easily upstage Temple, MGM replaced her with Virginia Weidler. As a result, her only film for Metro was \"Kathleen\" in 1941, a story about an", "id": "7504264" }, { "contents": "Barbara Read\n\n\ncompany. When she failed to receive any roles because of her lack of experience, she joined the Laguna Beach Players theater, where she acted in a new play each month for two years. Her first film appearance was one of the three principal girls in the 1936 comedy film \"Three Smart Girls\", which also starred Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. From 1937 through 1939, Read appeared in nine films, most notably starring in \"The Spellbinder\", opposite Lee Tracy. From 1940 through 1948, she appeared in", "id": "5406875" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy\n\n\nLife Begins for Andy Hardy\" (1941). Garland's character, Betsy Booth, is an aspiring singer and she sings in the first two of these films. However, although Garland songs were planned for the final film, they were eventually dropped. Unlike Garland-Rooney films outside of the \"Andy Hardy\" series, Rooney's Hardy character is not a musician, so Garland and Rooney do not perform together in the Hardy films. Rooney played the character continuously from age 16 to 25, when he appeared in", "id": "7714497" }, { "contents": "Fay Holden\n\n\nthe depression era. Eventually they left Vancouver and moved to Hollywood. Holden appeared in 46 motion pictures between 1935 and 1958, but is best known for her recurring role as Emily Hardy, mother of Mickey Rooney's character in the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" film series. The series was enormously popular in the late 1930s and early '40s, and Holden was in 15 of the 16 Hardy movies, surpassed only by Rooney, who was in all 16. Holden is also remembered for her performance as Hazel, the mother", "id": "15552902" }, { "contents": "Margaret Early\n\n\nBrent, Bette Davis, and Fay Bainter. She later became a freelance actress and found herself working in various roles at such studios as RKO, Warner Bros., and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her other screen roles include parts in \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1939), \"Strike Up The Band\" (1940), \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" (1941), and \"Stage Door Canteen\" (1943). She made her last screen appearance in \"Cinderella Jones\" (1946)", "id": "11267109" }, { "contents": "Sheila Darcy\n\n\n1935 her career had taken off, and from then until 1941 she had roles in 41 films. In most of her early films, she played the heroine in B-movies, often Westerns. Darcy's best known roles were as the female lead in cliffhangers, such as the 1939 film \"Zorro's Fighting Legion\", in which she performed opposite Reed Hadley. She also played the Dragon Lady in the serial \"Terry and the Pirates\", released in 1940. In Westerns, she often played opposite popular cowboy", "id": "21067295" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nIn 1937, Rooney made his first film alongside Judy Garland with \"Thoroughbreds Don't Cry\". Garland and Rooney became close friends as they co-starred in future films and became a successful song-and-dance team. Audiences delighted in seeing the \"playful interactions between the two stars showcase a wonderful chemistry\". Along with three of the \"Andy Hardy\" films, where she portrayed a girl attracted to Andy, they appeared together in a string of successful musicals, including \"Babes in Arms\" (1939", "id": "5690267" }, { "contents": "Brenda Marshall\n\n\nArdis Ankerson (September 29, 1915 – July 30, 1992), known as Brenda Marshall, was a Filipino-born, American film actress. Marshall made her first film appearance in the 1939 \"Espionage Agent\". The following year, she played the leading lady to Errol Flynn in \"The Sea Hawk\". After divorcing actor Richard Gaines in 1940, she married William Holden in 1941, and her own career soon slowed. She starred opposite James Cagney in \"Captains of the Clouds\" (1942).", "id": "14392731" }, { "contents": "Julie Haydon\n\n\nmade by MGM. In 1932, she signed with RKO, and her first major role came that year in \"The Conquerors\", directed by William Wellman Her most notable performance came in 1935's \"The Scoundrel\" playing opposite Noël Coward, but, despite a new contract with MGM, only a few more films were to come in her short career, including \"A Family Affair\" (1937), the initial movie in the Andy Hardy series. Some have held that it was Haydon and not Fay Wray who", "id": "19690260" }, { "contents": "Jean Darling\n\n\nAssociation. She turned down an offer to appear alongside Mickey Rooney in one of the MGM \"Andy Hardy\" movies, and went on Broadway, making her debut in the musical \"Count Me In\" in 1942. Darling's stage career hit a real high when she landed the role of Carrie Pipperidge in the original Broadway production of \"Carousel\" in 1945. She appeared in 850 consecutive performances. Her role as Carrie Pipperidge helped her with parts for radio and TV in the 1950s. She hosted her own television show", "id": "1616169" }, { "contents": "List of Lana Turner performances\n\n\nLana Turner was an American actress who appeared in over fifty films during her career, which spanned four decades. Discovered in 1937 at age 16, she signed a contract with Warner Bros. and appeared in several films for the studio before signing a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The studio's co-founder, Louis B. Mayer, helped further her career by casting her in several youth-oriented comedies and musicals, including \"Dancing Co-Ed\" (1939), \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941),", "id": "7891475" }, { "contents": "Marguerite Chapman\n\n\ncontract to Warner Brothers in 1941, and then with Columbia from 1942 to 1948. She made her film debut in 1940, working for the next two years in small roles. In 1942, her big break came with Republic Pictures when she was cast in the leading female role in the twelve-part adventure film serial \"Spy Smasher\", a production that has been ranked among the best serials ever made. Chapman soon began receiving more leading roles and appeared opposite important stars such as Edward G. Robinson and George Sanders.", "id": "2722471" }, { "contents": "Jeanne Cagney\n\n\nRKO Pictures. However, she signed a long-term contract with Paramount Pictures. She appeared in 19 films between 1939 and 1965, including four films with her brother James: \"Yankee Doodle Dandy\" (1942), \"The Time of Your Life\" (1948), \"A Lion Is in the Streets\" (1953), and \"Man of a Thousand Faces\" (1957). Cagney gave a noted performance opposite Mickey Rooney in the film noir crime film \"Quicksand\" (1950). Cagney", "id": "6954933" }, { "contents": "Little Annie Rooney (1925 film)\n\n\nLittle Annie Rooney is a 1925 American silent comedy-drama film starring Mary Pickford and directed by William Beaudine. Pickford, one of the most successful actresses of the silent era, was best known throughout her career for her iconic portrayals of penniless young girls. After generating only modest box office revenue playing adults in her previous two films, Pickford wrote and produced \"Little Annie Rooney\" to cater to silent film audiences. Though she was 33 years old, Pickford played the title role, an Irish girl living in the slums", "id": "236551" }, { "contents": "Edith Barrett\n\n\n, she married leading man Vincent Price in 1938. The marriage ended in 1948. She and Price had one son, author/poet and environmental activist Vincent Barrett Price (born 1940). Her biggest Broadway success was as star of the now-obscure production \"Mrs. Moonlight\". In her first film, \"Ladies in Retirement\" (1941), she played one of the two half-witted half-sisters of Ida Lupino's homicidal character. Her best remembered movie role is possibly Mrs. Holland's mother-", "id": "18853813" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\nHardy film, \"A Family Affair\", in 1937. Mickey Rooney played Andy Hardy in the series, supported by Lewis Stone, Ann Rutherford, and Fay Holden. The movies were directed by George B. Seitz. Parker's character, Marion, appeared in most of the films, and her romances were a recurring feature of the series. Though she and the character she played were absent from the last two Andy Hardy films of the 1940s, Parker came out of retirement to play Marian Hardy in one more movie,", "id": "18919252" }, { "contents": "Nancy Walker\n\n\nrole provided Walker with her film debut when she signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to make a movie version, starring Lucille Ball (filmed in 1943). In 1943, she also appeared with Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland in the second film version of \"Girl Crazy\". Her next film, \"Broadway Rhythm\", in which she had a featured musical number backed by Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra, \"Milkman, Keep Those Bottles Quiet\", ended Walker's contract with Metro. Her dry comic", "id": "9657966" }, { "contents": "List of Gloria Stuart performances\n\n\nstarred in two films opposite Shirley Temple: \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936), and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938), both for 20th Century Fox. She subsequently co-starred in \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939) opposite Don Ameche. Dissatisfied with her career in film, Stuart shifted her focus to stage acting. Between 1940 and 1942, Stuart appeared in numerous summer stock plays in New England, including a 1940 production of \"Our Town\" in which she starred alongside its playwright", "id": "19503931" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nBabes in Arms is the 1939 American film version of the 1937 Broadway musical of the same name. The film version stars Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland, and features Charles Winninger, Guy Kibbee, June Preisser, Grace Hayes, and Betty Jaynes. The film concerns a group of youngsters trying to put on a show to prove their vaudevillian parents wrong and make it to Broadway. The original Broadway script was significantly revamped, restructured, and rewritten to accommodate Hollywood's needs. In 1921, vaudeville performer Joe Moran (Winninger)", "id": "9219782" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nhim when he transferred to MGM in 1938. Turner attracted attention by playing the role of a murder victim in her first film, LeRoy's \"They Won't Forget\" (1937), and she later transitioned into featured roles, often appearing as an ingénue. During the early 1940s, Turner established herself as a leading actress and one of MGM's top performers, appearing in such films as the film noir \"Johnny Eager\" (1941); the musical \"Ziegfeld Girl\" (1941); the horror film", "id": "11929991" }, { "contents": "Mickey Rooney\n\n\nthe stature of most leading men. He appeared in a number of films, including \"Words and Music\" in 1948, which paired him for the last time with Garland on film (he appeared with her on one episode as a guest on \"The Judy Garland Show\"). He briefly starred in a CBS radio series, \"Shorty Bell\", in the summer of 1948, and reprised his role as \"Andy Hardy\", with most of the original cast, in a syndicated radio version of \"The", "id": "5690276" }, { "contents": "Donna Reed\n\n\nmany starlets at MGM, she played Mickey Rooney's love interest in an Andy Hardy film, in her case the hugely popular \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942). She was second billed in a children's film, \"Mokey\" (1942). Reed played a love interest in \"Calling Dr. Gillespie\" (1942) and \"Apache Trail\" (1942), then did a thriller with Edward Arnold, \"Eyes in the Night\" (1942), directed by Fred Zinnemann. Reed had", "id": "13840841" }, { "contents": "Evalyn Knapp\n\n\nHis Private Secretary\", a light comedy in which Wayne portrays a suit-and-tie wearing playboy determined to win her over. She also appeared in \"Corruption\" that year opposite Preston Foster. One of her better known film roles was opposite Ken Maynard in the 1934 film \"In Old Santa Fe\" featuring Gene Autry in his first screen appearance, in which he sang with a bluegrass band. She worked through 1941, but her career slowed afterward. In 1943, she played her last role, uncredited,", "id": "560741" }, { "contents": "Kathryn Grayson\n\n\nexercise. Within a year, Grayson had her first screen test. However, the studio executives were not satisfied, and she went through a further six months of lessons until she made her first film appearance in 1941's \"Andy Hardy's Private Secretary\" as the character's secretary Kathryn Land. In the film, she takes part in three musical numbers. Two further films were planned for Grayson in 1941; \"White House Girl\", which was later made in 1948 with Durbin, and \"Very Warm for May", "id": "20045432" }, { "contents": "Susi Nicoletti\n\n\nSusi Nicoletti (3 September 1918 – 5 June 2005) was a Bavarian-born actress best remembered today for over 100 supporting roles mostly in comedy films. She was born as Susanne Emilie Luise Adele Habersack in Munich, but spent most of her childhood with her parents in Amsterdam. Back in Munich, she made her stage debut at age 13. Two years later she became a ballerina. In the early 1930s she turned to cabaret. In 1939, she was offered her first film role. In 1940 she moved to", "id": "6091110" }, { "contents": "Dorothy Morris\n\n\nShe did a screen test for the female lead in \"The Courtship of Andy Hardy\" (1942), but lost to Donna Reed. Appearing in bit parts in several of the studio's more successful films, Morris was signed to a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract in 1941. For one of her early film roles, \"Cry 'Havoc'\" (1943), she affected a British accent. Her next picture was the well-received drama \"The Human Comedy\", which featured a star cast,", "id": "323808" }, { "contents": "The Courtship of Andy Hardy\n\n\nThe Courtship of Andy Hardy is a 1942 film, part of the Andy Hardy series. It gave an early role to Donna Reed although Mickey Rooney had lobbied for his then-wife Ava Gardner to have her part. Within a few months of the film's release, she filed for divorce. This was the 12th entry in the long-running \"Andy Hardy\" series of sixteen. When Carvel teenager and new tow truck-owner Andy Hardy is stopped by a policeman for driving without a license plate, a radio", "id": "20736523" }, { "contents": "Mae Busch\n\n\nMae Busch (18 June 1891 – 20 April 1946) was an Australian-born actress who worked in both silent and sound films in early Hollywood. In the latter part of her career she appeared in many Laurel and Hardy comedies, where she frequently played Hardy's shrewish wife. Mae Busch was born Annie May Busch in Melbourne, Victoria to popular Australian vaudeville performers Elizabeth Maria Lay and Frederick William Busch. Her mother had been active since 1883 under the stage names \"Dora Devere\" and then \"Dora Busch\";", "id": "10830566" }, { "contents": "Hannelore Schroth\n\n\ndebut at the age of nine in 1931's Max Ophüls' comedy \"Dann schon lieber Lebertran\" opposite her mother. Until age sixteen she attended drama school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Her early film successes include \"Spiel im Sommerwind\" (1938), \"Weisser Flieder\" (1939) and \"Kitty und die Weltkonferenz\" (1939) - the latter of which was her first leading role. During World War II, Hannelore Schroth continued performing in films. Unlike her father, Heinrich Schroth, who was by", "id": "16153872" }, { "contents": "Lupe Vélez\n\n\npopular actress, RKO Pictures did not renew her contract in 1934. Over the next few years, Vélez worked for various studio as a freelance actress; she also spent two years in England where she filmed \"The Morals of Marcus\" and \"Gypsy Melody\" (both 1936). She returned to Los Angeles the following year where she appeared in the final part of the Wheeler & Woolsey comedy \"High Flyers\" (1937). Vélez made her final appearance on Broadway in the 1938 musical \"You Never Know\"", "id": "20716058" }, { "contents": "Katharine Kavanaugh\n\n\nher biggest claims to fame was helping to create the Jones Family characters, who would appear in 17 low-budget films between 1936 and 1940. The first film in the series, \"Every Saturday Night\", was released in 1936, and Kavanaugh would also co-write \"Educating Father\", released later that same year. While her screenwriting career cooled in the late 1930s, she continued writing plays that were produced in the Los Angeles area until her death in 1942. She and her husband, Oliver Ziegfeld (", "id": "21036559" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\n, including \"The Wizard of Oz\" and \"Babes in Arms\". She was the fourth person to receive the award as well as only one of twelve in history to ever be presented with one. Garland starred in three films released in 1940: \"Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\", \"Strike Up the Band\", and \"Little Nellie Kelly\". In the last, she played her first adult role, a dual role of both mother and daughter. \"Little Nellie Kelly\" was purchased from George M.", "id": "13593089" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nliving on her own. In late 1949 Hardi and her husband moved to Jakarta. Two years later she made her feature film debut in a bit role in the Produksi Film Negara (PFN; State Film Corporation)'s \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". The following year she took a starring role in another PFN film, \"Si Pintjang\", portraying an old woman; as she was only twenty-four, she was artificially aged with make-up. That same year she appeared as the lead love interest in", "id": "15623084" }, { "contents": "Jane Frazee\n\n\nB film \"Melody and Moonlight\" (1940) for Republic Pictures. Shortly after the film's release she was signed by Universal Pictures and was featured in \"Buck Privates\", the high-grossing 1941 comedy/World War II film starring Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The strong impression she made in that film elevated her to leading-lady roles in Universal's popular \"B\" musicals, usually appearing opposite Robert Paige. She left Universal in late 1942, when she married actor-director Glenn Tryon, who", "id": "11708629" }, { "contents": "Andy Hardy Meets Debutante\n\n\nAndy Hardy Meets Debutante is a 1940 American romantic comedy film directed by George B. Seitz. The film stars Lewis Stone, Mickey Rooney, Cecilia Parker, Fay Holden and Judy Garland. It is the ninth of the \"Andy Hardy\" full-length film series. Andy Hardy (Mickey Rooney) from Carvel becomes infatuated with a well-known young socialite, Daphne Fowler (Diana Lewis), from New York City. Even though he hasn’t met the woman in person, he drops her name to his friends and", "id": "11382757" }, { "contents": "Martha Vickers\n\n\nplayed minor roles in several films during the early 1940s, working first at Universal Studios and then at RKO Pictures. She next went to Warner Bros., where \"they gave her the star push, rearranging her surname to 'Vickers.'\" Her work there included the role of Carmen Sternwood, the promiscuous, drug-addicted younger sister of Lauren Bacall's character in \"The Big Sleep\" (1946). She also starred in a musical, \"The Time, the Place and the Girl\", followed by", "id": "721594" }, { "contents": "Judy Garland\n\n\nwas over, she was summoned back to work and ultimately performed two songs as a guest in the Rodgers and Hart biopic \"Words and Music\" (1948), which was her last appearance with Mickey Rooney. Despite the all-star cast, \"Words and Music\" barely broke even at the box office. Having regained her strength, as well as some needed weight during her suspension, Garland felt much better and in the fall of 1948, she returned to MGM to replace a pregnant June Allyson for the musical", "id": "13593101" }, { "contents": "Martha O'Driscoll\n\n\n's Dangerous\" (1937), she was not credited by name. In the Deanna Durbin vehicle \"Mad About Music\" (1937), she was billed as \"pretty girl.\" Her face appeared on such advertisements as Charm-Kurl Supreme Cold Wave and Max Factor Hollywood Face Powder. Universal lent O'Driscoll to MGM for parts in \"The Secret of Dr Kildare\" (1939) and \"Judge Hardy and Son\" (1940), starring Mickey Rooney. RKO, however, gave O'Driscoll her first two starring", "id": "20196774" }, { "contents": "Marlia Hardi\n\n\nMarlia Hardi (also Marlia Hardy; 10 March 192718 June 1984) was an Indonesian film actress active from 1951 to 1983. Born in the Central Javan city of Magelang, she took to the stage in the 1940s before moving to Jakarta in 1949. Two years later she made her feature film debut in \"Untuk Sang Merah Putih\". Over the next two decades she appeared in over seventy films, became recognized for her depictions of mothers, and received the Citra Award for Best Supporting Actress. Despite her productiveness, however", "id": "15623082" }, { "contents": "Susan Peters\n\n\nLos Angeles. After completing filming of the comedy \"Andy Hardy's Double Life\" (1942) in which she had a lead role, Mervyn LeRoy cast Peters in the drama \"Random Harvest\", in which she portrayed a young woman who falls in love with her step-uncle. The film was one of the top 25 highest-earning films of the year, and Peters's performance garnered her critical acclaim, earning her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. The success of \"Random Harvest\" led", "id": "17519590" }, { "contents": "Paulette Goddard\n\n\nshe appeared as an uncredited extra in two films, the Laurel and Hardy short film \"Berth Marks\" (1929), and George Fitzmaurice's drama \"The Locked Door\" (1929). Following her divorce, she briefly visited Europe before returning to Hollywood in late 1930 with her mother. Her second attempt at acting was no more successful than the first, as she landed work only as an extra. In 1930, she signed her first film contract with producer Samuel Goldwyn to appear as a Goldwyn Girl in \"", "id": "3980436" }, { "contents": "Trixie Friganza\n\n\nTrixie Friganza (born Delia O'Callaghan; November 29, 1870 – February 27, 1955) began her career as an operetta soubrette, working her way from the chorus to starring in musical comedies to having her own feature act on the vaudeville circuit. She transitioned to film in the early 1920s mostly playing small characters that were quirky and comedic and retired from the stage in 1940 due to health concerns. She spent her last years teaching drama to young women in a convent school and when she died she left everything to the convent", "id": "13928014" }, { "contents": "Susan Hayward\n\n\nSusan Hayward (born Edythe Marrenner; June 30, 1917 – March 14, 1975) was an American actress and model. After working as a fashion model, Hayward traveled to Hollywood in 1937. She secured a film contract and played several small supporting roles over the next few years. By the late 1940s, the quality of her film roles had improved, and she achieved recognition for her dramatic abilities with the first of five Academy Award nominations for Best Actress for her performance as an alcoholic in \"Smash-Up,", "id": "14143916" }, { "contents": "Nella Walker\n\n\nyear to 1938, she had 23 film appearances. Her biggest film appearance during this period was in \"Young Dr. Kildare\" with Lionel Barrymore and Lew Ayres. Throughout the 1930s, her career was strong, and despite never being a premier star, she repeatedly had solid acting roles. She finished the decade strongly in 1939 with nine film roles, only three of which were uncredited. The 1940s mirrored her success of the previous decade in many ways, with appearances in 37 films from 1940 to 1947. Later in her", "id": "4686869" }, { "contents": "May Wallace\n\n\nMay Wallace (August 23, 1877 – December 11, 1938) was an American film actress. She appeared in 63 films between 1914 and 1939. Wallace was born in Russiaville, Indiana and died in Los Angeles, California, where she worked in Hollywood as a film actress. She often played supporting roles for producer Hal Roach in his Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang comedies, mostly in maternal roles. Wallace was married to Thomas W. Maddox until her death, they had one daughter and one son. She died of", "id": "9169980" }, { "contents": "Ora Carew\n\n\na film editor. Ora's birth year has been listed as 1893, on her death certificate and is also what her grave says, but Utah birth index and the 1900 census indicate 1891. She was educated by private tutors and at Roland Hall Seminary. After her father died on June 19, 1896, her mother moved with her three children to California. Her screen career began with MGM, following numerous engagements in vaudeville, musical comedy and stock. Some of her most notable films with MGM were \"Go West,", "id": "19207733" }, { "contents": "Eilene Janssen\n\n\nMary Eilene Janssen (born May 25, 1938), is a retired American film and television actress. Eilene Janssen was born in Los Angeles, California on May 25, 1938, to parents Henry Janssen and Mary Ellen Thompson. She began her film career as a child actress in the early 1940s. With her father being a longtime worker for Universal Studios, Eilene Janssen made her first screen appearance in the 1940 film \"Sandy Gets Her Man\". She continued to have bit parts in several movies such as \"Two", "id": "12362318" }, { "contents": "Ann Rutherford\n\n\nLouis Mayer originally refused the loan because he considered the role too minor, but Rutherford passionately appealed to him to change his mind. In December 1939, while promoting the new movie, Rutherford visited six Confederate Army veterans at the Confederate Soldiers Home near Atlanta. One of the veterans gave Rutherford a rose corsage tied with Confederate colors. From 1937 until 1942, Rutherford portrayed Polly Benedict in the MGM Andy Hardy youth comedy film series with actor Mickey Rooney. Her first film in this series was \"You're Only Young Once\"", "id": "6472820" }, { "contents": "Gloria Stuart\n\n\nMan\" (1933), followed by roles in the Shirley Temple musicals \"Poor Little Rich Girl\" (1936) and \"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm\" (1938). She also starred as Queen Anne in the musical comedy \"The Three Musketeers\" (1939). Beginning in 1940, Stuart slowed her film career, instead performing in regional theater in New England. In 1945, following a tenure as a contract player for Twentieth Century Fox, Stuart abandoned her acting career and shifted to a career as an artist", "id": "3454792" }, { "contents": "Lana Turner\n\n\nand Judy Garland in the Andy Hardy film \"Love Finds Andy Hardy\" (1938). During the shoot, Turner completed her studies with an educational social worker, allowing her to graduate high school that year. The film was a box-office success, and her appearance in it as a flirtatious high school student convinced studio head Louis B. Mayer that Turner could be the next Jean Harlow, a sex symbol who had died six months before Turner's arrival at MGM. Mayer helped further Turner's career by giving her", "id": "11930007" }, { "contents": "Linda Darnell\n\n\nLinda Darnell (born Monetta Eloyse Darnell, October 16, 1923April 10, 1965) was an American film actress. Darnell progressed from modeling as a child to acting in theater and film. At the encouragement of her mother, she made her first film in 1939, and appeared in supporting roles in big-budget films for 20th Century Fox throughout the 1940s. She rose to fame with co-starring roles opposite Tyrone Power in adventure films, and established a main character career after her role in \"Forever Amber\" (", "id": "9752181" }, { "contents": "Marcia Mae Jones\n\n\nsigned her to co-star with Jackie Moran in a few rustic romances; when this series lapsed, both Jones and Moran joined Monogram's popular action-comedy series starring Frankie Darro. As a young adult, she continued to work in motion pictures, notably in \"Nine Girls\" (1944) and \"Arson, Inc.\" (1948). Like many familiar faces of the 1940s, she appeared on numerous television programs. In 1951 she appeared as comic foil to Buster Keaton in Keaton's filmed TV series.", "id": "5963847" }, { "contents": "Peggy Drake\n\n\nPeggy Drake (6 October 1922 – 19 September 2014), was an Austrian film and television actress. She primarily appeared in B-movies of the 1940s. Born Lieselotte Mayer in Vienna, Austria, she moved to the United States with her family at the age of three. Her acting career started with an uncredited role in the film \"Too Many Girls\" (1940). Her career was short-lived, appearing in five films between 1940 and 1942, most notably in the serial film \"King of the", "id": "8901594" }, { "contents": "Signe Hasso\n\n\nfilm in Sweden. In 1933, she made her first film, \"Tystnadens hus\", with German film director/cameraman Harry Hasso, whom she married the same year. They had a son by the time she was 19. They divorced in 1941. In 1940, she moved to the United States, where she signed a contract with RKO Pictures, who promoted her as \"the next Garbo\". With few RKO roles forthcoming, she turned to the stage to make a living. According to the Internet Broadway", "id": "19347089" }, { "contents": "Rita La Roy\n\n\nand the \"cobra dance\" in which her feet and legs were tied together under a stylized snakeskin so that she danced by undulating her torso.\" In 1929, she made her film debut in \"The Delightful Rogue\", starring opposite matinee idol Rod La Rocque. Over the next several years, working as part of the RKO Radio Pictures stable, she appeared in both starring and supporting roles. While her final significant role was in the 1940 comedy-mystery \"Hold That Woman!\", she had several small", "id": "13534727" }, { "contents": "Elizabeth Taylor\n\n\nto socially prominent American parents, Taylor moved with her family to Los Angeles in 1939. She made her acting debut in a minor role in the Universal Pictures film \"There's One Born Every Minute\" (1942) but the studio ended her contract after a year. She was then signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and became a popular teen star after appearing in \"National Velvet\" (1944). She transitioned to more mature roles in the 1950s, when she starred in the comedy \"Father of the", "id": "19979789" }, { "contents": "Karin Booth\n\n\nKarin Booth (born June Francis Hoffman, June 19, 1916 – July 27, 2003) was an American film and TV actress of the 1940s to 1960s. She was born June Francis Hoffman on June 19, 1916, in Minneapolis, Minnesota to Francis T. and Ebba V. Hoffman. She lived in Portland and Los Angeles, attending John Marshall High School. She began her career modeling and being a chorus girl in 1939 and was signed under contract to Paramount Pictures in 1941 under the name Katharine Booth. After changing her", "id": "1386964" }, { "contents": "Saranya Ponvannan\n\n\ndebut in Mani Ratnam's production \"Nayakan,\" as the female lead opposite Kamal Haasan in 1987. She made her first Telugu appearance in 1988 film \"Neerajanam;\" her Malayalam debut was a year later in the 1989 film \"Artham\" starring opposite Mamooty. In 1996 almost during the end of her career as a lead actress she debuted in Kannada cinema in \"Appaji\". After marriage in 1995, she semi retired from acting. In 2000 she appeared playing the lead role in the comedy television series, \"", "id": "2557700" }, { "contents": "Franciska Gaal\n\n\n\", opposite Fredric March. She followed this with the comedy \"The Girl Downstairs\" (1938) with Franchot Tone, a remake of her Austrian success \"Catherine the Last\". In 1939, Gaal co-starred with Bing Crosby in the musical \"Paris Honeymoon\". She returned to Hungary in 1940 because of her mother's illness and remained there for the duration of World War II. In 1946, she began work on a new film in Budapest the Soviet-backed \"Renee XIV\" but filming was", "id": "19308441" }, { "contents": "Jo Ann Sayers\n\n\nstudent production and invited her to Hollywood for a screen test. She was offered a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Her first credited film role was in 1938. In 1940, she was selected for the titular role in the Broadway production of \"My Sister Eileen\", opposite Shirley Booth, who was two decades Sayers' senior, which opened on December 26, 1940. She remained in the Broadway cast until June 1942, when she left to marry Anthony A. Bliss (1913-1991), a New", "id": "6389492" }, { "contents": "Babes in Arms (film)\n\n\nstar Baby Rosalie Essex (June Preisser), but Mickey gets in a fight with Jeff. Mickey tells Judge Black that his parents' show flopped. The judge gives Mickey 30 days to pay damages. Don and Molly sing \"Where or When\" with an orchestra of children. Mickey has a date with Baby and dines in her house. Mickey wants Baby in the show, which needs $287. She offers to pay it. Mickey smokes a cigar and leaves sick. Mickey tells Patsy that Baby has to play", "id": "9219785" }, { "contents": "Chela Ruiz\n\n\nChela Ruiz (5 June 1921 - 1 December 1999) was an Argentine actress. Her career spanned radio, film, television and stage, and in 1997 the Argentine Association of Actors awarded her the prestigious Premio Podestá for her theatrical work. Ruiz made her professional debut on Radio Splendid, along with her sister Nora Cullen, working as an actress and reader. In the 1940s and 1950s she was known for her narration of radio plays by Nené Cascallar. She began appearing on stage in 1942. A film career followed later", "id": "10450238" }, { "contents": "Petula Clark\n\n\nher film career in the late 1960s, starring in two big musical films. In \"Finian's Rainbow\" (1968), she starred opposite Fred Astaire and she was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for her performance. With her role, she again made history by becoming Astaire's final on-screen dance partner. The following year she was cast with Peter O'Toole in \"Goodbye, Mr. Chips\" (1969), a musical adaptation of the classic James Hilton novella", "id": "19868394" }, { "contents": "Sara Haden\n\n\n\". Haden later became a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract player in the late 1930s and had smallish roles in many of the studio's films, most notably in the Andy Hardy series starring Mickey Rooney, cast as the spinsterish Aunt Milly Forrest. Haden made her last film, \"Andy Hardy Comes Home\", in 1958, but was active on television until a 1965 guest spot on \"Dr. Kildare\". She was most notable for her stern, humorless characterisations such as a truant officer in Shirley Temple's \"", "id": "16961173" }, { "contents": "Rafaela Ottiano\n\n\n's last film was the musical comedy \"I Married an Angel\" (1942), starring Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. During her career in film, she appeared in approximately 45 motion pictures, opposite such actors as Barbara Stanwyck, Conrad Nagel, Peter Lorre, Zasu Pitts, and Katharine Hepburn. Ottiano lived in the Times Square area during the Prohibition Era and never married. She died in 1942, in the Boston home of her late parents, of intestinal cancer at the age of 54. She is buried at", "id": "9444719" }, { "contents": "Doris Davenport\n\n\nDoris Davenport, also known as Doris Jordan (January 1, 1917 – June 18, 1980) was an American film actress during the 1930s and early 1940s. Davenport was born in Moline, Illinois, but raised in Hollywood, California. She started auditioning for acting roles, and performed in her first film in 1934, titled \"Kid Millions\". From 1934 to 1939, she appeared in only five films, supporting herself by working in New York City as a fashion model between films. However, when she auditioned", "id": "2801211" }, { "contents": "Patricia Dane\n\n\nPatricia Dane (born Thelma Pearl Pippins, August 4, 1919 – June 5, 1995) was an American film actress of the 1940s. Dane was born Thelma Pearl Pippins in Blountstown, Florida and was also known as Thelma Byrnes after her stepfather. She began her career designing clothes for a New York City dress firm and was signed to an MGM contract in 1941. Dane's earliest appearances were two uncredited roles in \"Ziegfeld Girl\" and \"I'll Wait for You\" (both 1941). She played the", "id": "18013995" }, { "contents": "Cecilia Parker\n\n\na young girl. Her new contract called for a starting salary of $75 a week and scales up to $1000 a week for the seventh year. In November 1935, Parker purchased a new home in Beverly Hills, California. The following year she joined the ballet school of Dave Gould at MGM, along with Maureen O'Sullivan. By the fall of 1936, Parker was studying singing. She played Marian Hardy in the extremely popular Andy Hardy film series in the late 1930s and early 1940s. She was in the original", "id": "18919251" }, { "contents": "Rooney Mara\n\n\nwas always afraid that I might fail.\" Her first and only role in high school was Juliet in \"Romeo and Juliet\", which she got after being signed up to audition by a friend. Mara acted in a few student films while at NYU, and then began her career in acting, first auditioning at the age of nineteen. Mara first appeared as an extra in films which starred her sister, including a bit-part in the 2005 direct-to-video horror film \"\". She found work", "id": "18311311" }, { "contents": "Georgiana Young\n\n\nBelzer and Gladys Royal. Along with her half-sisters, she was raised Roman Catholic. Young's acting career was short-lived, though she appeared in three films. Her debut role was as Berta Hubbard, sister of Mabel Gardiner Hubbard, in Irving Cummings's 1939 biographical film \"The Story of Alexander Graham Bell\", opposite her sisters Loretta (as Mabel), Sally, and Polly Ann. She would later have bit parts in two other films: \"No, No, Nanette\" (1940)", "id": "6269969" }, { "contents": "Glikeriya Bogdanova-Chesnokova\n\n\nmedals for her service. Following the war, in 1946, Bogdanova-Chesnokova returned to the Leningrad State Theatre of Musical Comedy. In 1947, she received the Stalin Prize. In the mid 1950s, Bogdanova-Chesnokova performed during three circus seasons with the clown, The act involved acrobatic actions. In 1955, Bogdanova-Chesnokova made her first significant film appearance. She played Maria Mikhailovna in the comedy film \"Tamer of Tigers\". Generally, Bogdanova-Chesnokova was a character actress taking supporting roles. However, in", "id": "5458931" }, { "contents": "Judi West\n\n\nJudi West (born December 15, 1942) is an American actress, best known for her supporting role opposite Jack Lemmon in the 1966 comedy film \"The Fortune Cookie. Judi West acted in a few films in the 1960s and also appeared in television in the 1960s through the early 1980s. Her notable film appearances include: She had earlier worked on the Broadway stage including \"A Family Affair\" (1962) and \"She Loves Me\" (1963-1964). Married from 1971 to 1989 to actor John Rubinstein", "id": "5957659" }, { "contents": "Judy Holliday\n\n\nJudy Holliday (born Judith Tuvim, June 21, 1921 – June 7, 1965) was an American actress, comedian, and singer. She began her career as part of a nightclub act before working in Broadway plays and musicals. Her success in the 1946 stage production of \"Born Yesterday\" as Billie Dawn led to her being cast in the 1950 film version for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. She appeared in several films", "id": "15453399" }, { "contents": "Elena Lucena\n\n\nMaría Elena Lucena Arcuri (25 September 1914 – 7 October 2015) was an Argentine film actress of the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema (1940–60). She began her career in radio in the 1930s and reached her greatest success with the role of \"Chimbela\", which was later depicted in film, theater and television. Her extensive film career includes approximately 50 films, including notable performances in \"Chimbela\" (1939) and \"Una noche cualquiera\" (1951). During the 1940s she participated in films with comedians", "id": "16119436" }, { "contents": "Florence Nash\n\n\nLynch in \"Within the Law\". She was a noted theater actor and comedian in vaudeville until the 1930s (appearing in sketches including \"In 1999\"), when she moved to Hollywood to try her luck with films. Her most notable role was as \"Nancy Blake\" in the 1939 MGM blockbuster \"The Women\". She also was the author of a book of verse, \"June Dusk\", published in 1918. After her retirement from acting in 1939, she spent the next decade living comfortably in", "id": "6401074" }, { "contents": "Doris Nolan\n\n\nher jitters, the show was a success and Nolan got positive reviews. When Nolan left the play, Woods sent her back to Hollywood, getting her a contract with Universal Pictures. She continued to move back and forth between movies and theater throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Her most prominent film appearance was in the 1938 version of \"Holiday\", where she played alongside Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Her subsequent film roles went downhill, but she reinvigorated her Broadway career with an 18-month stint in \"The Doughgirls\",", "id": "14779965" }, { "contents": "Marjorie Stapp\n\n\nMarjorie Stapp (September 17, 1921 – June 2, 2014), was an American actress who was mainly in low-budget pictures. Stapp began her film career when she signed a contract with the film studio 20th Century-Fox in the 1940s. Her first screen appearance was in \"The Kid from Brooklyn\", a 1946 film starring Danny Kaye. This was followed by another minor appearance in \"Linda, Be Good\" (1947). Eventually, she landed a leading role in the Western movie \"The", "id": "3140505" }, { "contents": "Roshini (actress)\n\n\nRoshini is an Indian film actress who has worked in the Telugu and Tamil film industries. She is the younger sister actress Jyothika and half sister to Nagma. After getting a recommendation by her sister Nagma, Roshini made her acting debut in Selva's comedy film \"Sishya\", where she played the lead role alongside Karthik. She subsequently starred in \"Master\" (1997), opposite Chiranjeevi. Roshini was keen to accept performance-orientated roles and turned down several offers in late 1997 to be a part of films in", "id": "12724581" }, { "contents": "Lola Albright\n\n\nmotion picture debut with a small singing role in the 1947 musical comedy \"The Unfinished Dance\" and then appeared the following year in two Judy Garland movies: \"The Pirate\" and \"Easter Parade\". She first gained studio and public notice in the 1949 film noir production \"Champion\" with her portrayal of the wife of a manipulative boxing manager; she falls for a prizefighter played by Kirk Douglas. For the next several years, she appeared in secondary roles in over 20 films, including several B westerns. Among", "id": "18089616" }, { "contents": "Marika Rökk\n\n\nthe 1930s and 1940s. She had the technical skill and glamour to carry off the formulaic plots and dialogue and provide German audiences with a home grown star to rival the popular American actresses. \"Der Bettelstudent\" and \"Gasparone\", followed by \"Hello Janine!\" in 1939, all starred her together with Johannes Heesters and established them as the \"dream couple\" of the musical comedy genre. In her appearances she cultivated her \"magyar\" accent conveying a notion of \"paprika\" exoticism. Her films, which", "id": "9061566" }, { "contents": "Fay Wray\n\n\nShe continued to star in various films, including \"The Richest Girl in the World\", a second film with Joel McCrea, but by the early 1940s, her appearances became less frequent. She retired from acting in 1942 after her second marriage but due to financial exigencies soon resumed her acting career, and over the next three decades, Wray appeared in several films and also frequently on television. Wray was cast in the 1953-54 ABC situation comedy \"The Pride of the Family\" as Catherine Morrison. Paul Hartman", "id": "10781506" }, { "contents": "Margaret O'Brien\n\n\n(1944), opposite Judy Garland. As Tootie Smith, the feisty but fragile little sister of Judy Garland, she was a bright point in a very good film, especially in her musical numbers with Garland and during a Halloween sequence in which she confronts a grouchy neighbor. For her performance, she was awarded a special juvenile Oscar in 1944. Margaret and June Allyson were known as \"The Town Criers\" of MGM. \"We were always in competition: I wanted to cry better than June, and June wanted", "id": "7504217" }, { "contents": "Ann Sothern\n\n\nSothern appeared in two musical films in 1948, \"April Showers\" opposite Jack Carson and \"Words and Music\" starring an all-star cast of MGM actors, singers and dancers. In 1949, she appeared in the Academy Award-winning film \"A Letter to Three Wives\" for 20th Century Fox. Sothern received excellent reviews for her performance but the acclaim failed to stimulate her career, which had begun to wane in the late 1940s. In 1949, Sothern contracted hepatitis which she would battle for the next three", "id": "2026182" }, { "contents": "Jane Isbell\n\n\nWar soldier who once saved the life of Andrew Jackson. Clark Isbell's father was also a cousin of Alabama Governor William J. Samford. The Isbells moved to Los Angeles when Jane was an infant. The elder of two sisters, she began modeling and appearing as an extra in films when only four years old. In 1932, she made her first Mickey McGuire comedy starring Mickey Rooney and would eventually make five films in the Mickey McGuire series, similar to the Our Gang films. She grew up with child stars for playmates", "id": "12640286" }, { "contents": "Shirley Palmer (actress)\n\n\n1930 she appeared with Dorothy Sebastian and Neil Hamilton in \"Ladies Must Play\", her only film of that year. In 1932 she appeared in \"This Sporting Age\", and in 1933 she starred in probably her most recognizable role, starring opposite John Wayne in \"Somewhere in Sonora\". It would be her last credited role. She had two uncredited roles following that film, one the same year and the other in 1934, after which her career ended. She married once, to writer John Collier, and", "id": "3797930" }, { "contents": "Betty Grable\n\n\n(1930), starring Eddie Cantor. Although she received no on-screen credit for her performance, she led the film's opening musical number, entitled \"Cowboys\". In 1932, she signed a contract with RKO Radio Pictures, and she was assigned to a succession of acting, singing, and dancing classes at the studio's drama school. Her first film for the studio, \"Probation\" (1932), provided the 14-year-old Grable with her first credited screen role. Over the next few years", "id": "17559458" }, { "contents": "Erika Jayne\n\n\n, and pink.\" Soon after she gave birth to a son, Thomas Zizzo, Jr. After the couple divorced a few years later, she relocated to Los Angeles to pursue her dream of becoming a singer and performer. Early in her career, Girardi worked as a waitress to support herself between acting jobs. Girardi began her acting career in the early 1990s by appearing in small roles in several American television series and films. Her first on-screen appearance was a role as Suzanne Morton in the episode \"Prescription for", "id": "22006264" }, { "contents": "Thelma Scott\n\n\nThelma Scott (17 June 1913 – 23 November 2006) was an Australian character actress and television director whose 70-year career in theatre, radio, film and Australian television made her one of her country's most recognizable and beloved personalities. Having started her career in the early 1930s in theatre and film productions, she became one of the nation's biggest radio performers, during the 1940s featuring in productions such as \"Big Sister\" and \"Blue Hills\". She returned to made for TV films in the early late 1950s and", "id": "7852633" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the [START_ENT] Manchester Arena [END_ENT] in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
7b5cd3b1-5399-4ab1-88e8-5d77c99b0a24_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:0
[{"answer": "Manchester Arena", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "511678", "title": "Manchester Arena"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in [START_ENT] Manchester [END_ENT] , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
fd7e9647-ad15-4181-9b8c-8c7f2a18f60a_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:1
[{"answer": "Manchester", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "20206", "title": "Manchester"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by [START_ENT] Take That [END_ENT] singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
ffee045e-5ab3-4775-a377-8d048d912942_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:2
[{"answer": "Take That", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "371370", "title": "Take That"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and [START_ENT] The X Factor [END_ENT] judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
aa530da6-39f9-4f94-8729-659de707332d_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:3
[{"answer": "The X Factor (British series 8)", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "31774825", "title": "The X Factor (British series 8)"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge [START_ENT] Gary Barlow [END_ENT] as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
7e78b5c9-d851-40eb-b9fd-a29c5350e692_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:4
[{"answer": "Gary Barlow", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "755424", "title": "Gary Barlow"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for [START_ENT] Children in Need 2011 [END_ENT] . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
d68b7c1e-2fe8-4f7e-a722-3215ad3e49dc_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:5
[{"answer": "Children in Need 2011", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "33793527", "title": "Children in Need 2011"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the [START_ENT] Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall [END_ENT] in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
eb4c0050-4ff1-4980-a6d2-2cbe7356d898_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:6
[{"answer": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "33828926", "title": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on [START_ENT] BBC One [END_ENT] , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
16a51dd8-23d4-4068-b6f3-be310cd0132b_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:7
[{"answer": "BBC One", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "212157", "title": "BBC One"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and [START_ENT] BBC Radio 1 [END_ENT] on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
d25bd963-4c1d-4ce9-8e69-e10a5fba8c40_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:8
[{"answer": "BBC Radio 1", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "4348", "title": "BBC Radio 1"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the [START_ENT] official appeal telethon [END_ENT] . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
309d4d55-bd1a-4684-b881-59da843afa7a_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:9
[{"answer": "Children in Need 2011", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "33793527", "title": "Children in Need 2011"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters [START_ENT] Chris Moyles [END_ENT] and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
08a94388-62b8-4754-b42c-41f13fc7cd0e_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:10
[{"answer": "Chris Moyles", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "341294", "title": "Chris Moyles"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and [START_ENT] Fearne Cotton [END_ENT] , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
a714610f-b0fe-4de3-9bb9-68b473c19b0d_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:11
[{"answer": "Fearne Cotton", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "21931784", "title": "Fearne Cotton"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former [START_ENT] Doctor Who [END_ENT] actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
f0619da4-b2c3-4136-9d66-8dc553403022_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:12
[{"answer": "Doctor Who", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "8209", "title": "Doctor Who"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor [START_ENT] David Tennant [END_ENT] . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
f950d98f-91d4-4596-afdc-2419dbc79f03_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:13
[{"answer": "David Tennant", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "1672146", "title": "David Tennant"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian [START_ENT] Michael Bublé [END_ENT] , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
110eb644-380d-404b-bef9-bb0e78e0be3e_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:14
[{"answer": "Michael Bubl\u00e9", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "621503", "title": "Michael Bubl\u00e9"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , [START_ENT] Jessie J [END_ENT] , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
14dfb2cb-9fdc-48f5-81c0-7af9c8dbf823_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:15
[{"answer": "Jessie J", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "29427669", "title": "Jessie J"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , [START_ENT] Coldplay [END_ENT] , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
421932ae-ff75-4b94-a035-566c019d6e21_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:16
[{"answer": "Coldplay", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "80103", "title": "Coldplay"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , [START_ENT] James Morrison [END_ENT] , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
4548a556-9823-485b-babd-b3c70f837b2b_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:17
[{"answer": "James Morrison (singer)", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "4683946", "title": "James Morrison (singer)"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , [START_ENT] Tulisa Contostavlos [END_ENT] and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
b74d5981-8f9d-40fa-81e1-cab1a8ade8e3_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:18
[{"answer": "Tulisa", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "22731525", "title": "Tulisa"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and [START_ENT] Kelly Rowland [END_ENT] , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
cc79a590-9721-4c62-8dec-7a69c27a6242_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:19
[{"answer": "Kelly Rowland", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "261035", "title": "Kelly Rowland"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and [START_ENT] Lady Gaga [END_ENT] . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
3237cc4a-34a2-4807-b98d-dbf5cca487a6_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:20
[{"answer": "Lady Gaga", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "17782843", "title": "Lady Gaga"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on [START_ENT] The Chris Moyles Show [END_ENT] when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a BBC Radio Jersey
01e94ae4-7e2e-4b26-af70-8bfc7d28e92f_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:21
[{"answer": "The Chris Moyles Show", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "1925261", "title": "The Chris Moyles Show"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
Children in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester , England , on 17 November 2011 . The concert was organised by Take That singer and The X Factor judge Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011 . It became the second Children in Need Rocks concert organised by Barlow , after the Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall in 2009 . The concert was broadcast on BBC One , BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday 17 November 2011 , the day before the official appeal telethon . Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show , often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children . The event was hosted by radio and television presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton , along with former Doctor Who actor David Tennant . The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé , Jessie J , Coldplay , James Morrison , Barlow 's fellow The X Factor judges , Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland , Barlow himself and Lady Gaga . Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform . Tickets for the concert cost between # 55 and # 95 , and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011 . Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned , with one pair of tickets being sold to a [START_ENT] BBC Radio Jersey [END_ENT]
e92fd572-ec1e-42d3-9ae8-620357b96dbd_Children_in_Need_Rocks_Mancheste:22
[{"answer": "BBC Radio Jersey", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "569498", "title": "BBC Radio Jersey"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\n17 November 2011, the day before the official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton, along with former \"Doctor Who\" actor David Tennant. The acts performing at the concert included Canadian Michael Bublé, Jessie J, Coldplay, James Morrison, Barlow's fellow \"The X Factor\" judges, Tulisa", "id": "6531332" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nContostavlos and Kelly Rowland, Barlow himself and Lady Gaga. The house band was led by Mike Stevens and Steve Sidwell. Barlow revealed on The Chris Moyles Show when announcing the concert that he had personally contacted the acts he wanted to perform. Tickets for the concert cost between £55 and £95, and the 12,000 tickets sold out within 10 minutes of going on sale on 16 September 2011. Some tickets were also bought by radio stations and television programmes to be auctioned, with one pair of tickets being sold to a", "id": "6531333" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\n-Bear WorkshopPudsey and Blush bearsASDAMen's T-shirtLadies' T-shirtKids' T-shirtUmbrellasBaking goodsShortbread Cutter Cake standGreggsbrSpotty CupcakebrSpotty jam doughnut. Take That singer and \"The X Factor\" judge Gary Barlow organised a free charity music concert, Children in Need Rocks Manchester. It was broadcast on 17 November 2011 on BBC One, BBC One HD and simulcast on BBC Radio 1 and was hosted by Fearne Cotton, Chris Moyles and David Tennant. Performers included Lady Gaga, JLS, Hugh Laurie, Jessie J, Coldplay, Snow", "id": "7275153" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks Manchester\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks Manchester was a charity music concert held at the Manchester Arena in Manchester, England, on 17 November 2011. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2011. It became the second \"Children in Need Rocks\" concert organised by Barlow, after the \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" in 2009. The concert was broadcast on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 1 on Thursday", "id": "6531331" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nChildren in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. The concert was broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 19 November 2009, the day before", "id": "7867597" }, { "contents": "Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\n\n\nthe official appeal telethon. Short films of projects being funded by the charity were shown at various points throughout the show, often featuring one of the celebrities meeting a child or group of children. The event was hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenters Chris Moyles and Fearne Cotton along with Terry Wogan, who had been involved with \"Children in Need\" since 1980. The acts performing on the night included Barlow's band Take That, Muse, Mika, and Girls Aloud member Cheryl Cole. The house band was led by Mike", "id": "7867598" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nby the media, with them praising the involvement of Gary Barlow in the Children in Need project. As well as organising the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert, Barlow announced he was to helm the official single for the charity, a cover of Massive Attack's 'Teardrop' accompanied by a number of artists known as 'The Collective'. The CIN Rocks concert, single and gala contributed to £26 million raised for Children in Need that year. During the week of Children in Need 2011, Barlow organised", "id": "570613" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nfor the first time in over eleven years as he performs songs that span his 20-year career in music. He has also announced that all of the profits from the show went to charity. After the phenomenal success of 'Children in Need Rocks' in 2009, it was announced by Barlow that he is to organise it once again this time in Manchester, with some of the biggest acts in the music industry scheduled to appear. Barlow also confirmed that all proceeds will go to Children in Need. The concert was received positively", "id": "570612" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nElton John and Robbie Williams. In September 2011, it was announced that Gary Barlow would be headlining BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. Barlow's performance was praised by critics as he returned to Hyde Park as a solo artist for the first time since 1999. On 24 October 2011 Barlow announced that he was to play his first two full solo concerts in 12 years at the Royal Albert Hall entitled , with all proceeds going to the Prince's Trust charity. These concerts sold out 'minutes' after going on sale", "id": "570569" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nday they also revealed that the two concerts were expected to raise £400,000 for charity. Morwenna Ferrier of \"The Daily Telegraph\" praised Barlow and the concert and stated \"Within 24 hours, Gary Barlow — boy band veteran, reality TV judge and one time \"least fanciable\" Take That member — had switched deftly from The X Factor panel to the Albert Hall for this, his first of two UK solo shows in more than 11 years. It's a charity performance, for the Prince's Trust no less,", "id": "10489465" }, { "contents": "Electric Light Orchestra\n\n\n' Thing\" and \"Mr. Blue Sky\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin. The success of the Children in Need was followed by much support from BBC Radio 2's DJ Chris Evans, who asked his listeners if they wanted ELO to perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's \"Festival in a Day\" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes.", "id": "10321807" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nI thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's second leg solo concerts again sold out instantly after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of The Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on", "id": "10489459" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nresults shows to Afghanistan to meet the Armed Forces and experience their day-to-day lives in Camp Bastion. Barlow listened to the soldiers' stories, went for a five-kilometre run with the troops and played a morale-boosting concert for them as a thank you for their incredible hard work. On 12 November 2013, Barlow sang with Agnetha Fältskog (from ABBA) who was singing live on stage. It was at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London which Barlow organised. In November 2016", "id": "570618" }, { "contents": "GB40\n\n\nGB40 was the first concert played by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist in over 11 years and was held at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on 20 January 2011. The concert was organised by Barlow to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to The Prince's Trust charity. Encore tracks didn't make it to the BBC Radio 2 broadcast The performance was received extremely well, with Gordon Smart of \"The Sun\" commenting that \"the star belted out hits", "id": "3759767" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nthe support they need, especially at the moment.\" The tickets to the concert went on sale at 9am on Friday 28 October 2011 and were sold out 'in minutes'. Speaking about the reaction to the concerts, he said: \"I've been overwhelmed at the response for both shows which sold out on Friday. Fans will be glad to know we've kept some [tickets] back with great views of the stage to auction off to the highest bidder so we can make as much money as we", "id": "10489457" }, { "contents": "Jeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park\n\n\nJeff Lynne's ELO: Live in Hyde Park is a concert film by Jeff Lynne's ELO. On 14 September, 2014, Jeff Lynne's ELO, accompanied by the BBC Concert Orchestra and backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band, headlined BBC Radio 2s \"Festival In A Day\" at Hyde Park, London. The show marked the first time in almost 30 years that ELO had performed on a festival stage. 50,000 tickets for the event sold out in just under 15 minutes. The release also features interviews", "id": "8309769" }, { "contents": "Jessie J\n\n\nworth it. Even if its 1 life that's something.\" On 15 March 2013, Jessie's head was shaved live during Red Nose Day 2013, helping to raise money for Comic Relief. In November 2011, Jessie J performed \"Nobody's Perfect\" at the charity concert \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" held at the Manchester Arena to raise money for Children in Need 2011. Jessie J is a supporter of UK children's charity Believe in Magic, a charity that grants wishes to terminally ill children across the", "id": "6704676" }, { "contents": "Susanna Reid\n\n\n-up in the eleventh series of \"Strictly Come Dancing. \"Her professional partner was Kevin Clifton. She previously participated in the Children in Need special of the show, pairing with Robin Windsor and eventually winning it in November 2011. On 31 December 2013, Reid presented the \"New Year Live\" programme on BBC One, replacing Gabby Logan. Reid was joined in presenting duties by Take That lead singer Gary Barlow, who performed a concert at Westminster Central Hall at the same time. In February 2014, it was", "id": "11039347" }, { "contents": "Tim Routledge\n\n\nshows of the 2016/17/18/19 series of X Factor UK, solo tours and live TV concerts for renowned musician Gary Barlow, Take That, Jeff Lynne's ELO, Royal Blood, Dave, Florence & The Machine, Rita Ora, and Steps. Huge live events for the BBC including Radio 1 Big Weekend, BBC 6 Music Festival, BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards to name but a few. Muse Live at Horseguards Parade to celebrate the premiere of World War Z. In 2012 he was Associate Lighting Designer for the Queens Diamond Jubillee Concert", "id": "15415557" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ncelebrate the phenomenal success of his first full solo tour in 13 years, Gary invited cameras to film his 'Gary Barlow: In Concert' tour, his first ever solo live DVD. 'Gary Barlow Live' features 20 songs and surprise appearances from some very special guests, including Take That's own Mark Owen, JLS, James Corden and X Factor co-judge Nicole Scherzinger alongside exclusive behind the scenes footage and unseen performances. Filmed at his homecoming star-studded Manchester date last December, 'Gary Barlow Live'", "id": "10489461" }, { "contents": "Greg James\n\n\nwrote and starred in the Comedy Feeds episode \"Dead Air\". In March 2016, he hosted a segment of the \"Sport Relief\" telethon with Alesha Dixon. James has guest presented several episodes of \"The One Show\". In November 2016, James co-presented the BBC's \"Children in Need\" appeal for the first time. He also presented the \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall with Fearne Cotton. Between 2016 and 2017, Greg presented BT Sport's cricket", "id": "19647357" }, { "contents": "Terry Wogan\n\n\nthe run up to the annual telethon for Children in Need, the BBC held a special concert at The Royal Albert Hall, named Children in Need Rocks (for Terry). Unlike previous CiN Rocks concerts, the acts performing were specially selected by the BBC and Wogan's friends as they were synonymous with his career. Performances included Katie Melua (whom he championed during his time as a DJ on Radio 2), Olly Murs (who performed Wogan's favorite swing classics), Eva Cassidy, who posthumously performed over video", "id": "8423931" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\na charitable organization committed to fighting health issues and preserving the lives of children globally. The band played at Children in Need, a BBC charity concert, organized by Take That singer Gary Barlow in November 2009. Following the event's tradition of every artist duet-ting with another, Barlow had asked the band if they were interested in duet-ting with British singer Cheryl Cole. Quinn later said that it was not something the band would normally do, but agreed to, because it was for charity. Cole rehearsed with", "id": "10018167" }, { "contents": "Concerto: One Night in Central Park\n\n\non \"Today\", and the 60,000 tickets were sold out within the next few hours. The CD and DVD were released in over 70 countries, on November 15, 2011. In November he performed \"More\" at the Alan Titchmarsh Show in the United Kingdom, and \"Dancing with the Stars\" in the United States, and \"Amazing Grace\" on \"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno\". Bocelli later made television appearances include BBC Breakfast and the televised concert, Children in need, at the MEN Arena", "id": "4785922" }, { "contents": "I Should've Followed You Home\n\n\nfantastic combination. Their recording sessions happened separately so the pair did not finally meet in person until she visited London in May and the two met for the BBC documentary \"Agnetha: ABBA and After...\" which was broadcast in June. On 12 November 2013 Fältskog sang live \"I Should've Followed You Home\" at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London. She sang the song with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. It was her first live performance for 25 years. The video premiered at", "id": "6811257" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nRonan Keating, made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro safely on 7 March 2009, raising millions for Comic Relief. Barlow's charity efforts in 2009, including his organising of the BT Comic Relief Kilimanjaro Climb and his organising of \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", raised in excess £6 million. In addition to the charity events organised by Barlow, he has also shown support for fellow artists' charity efforts including that of Boyzone's Ronan Keating. The pair sang Take That's Back for Good", "id": "570606" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2009\n\n\n13 October 2009, where various celebrities attempted to travel around the world in 80 days without using air travel. Held on 12 November, \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\" was an evening of live music in London's Royal Albert Hall, organised by Gary Barlow. The concert included sets by Sir Paul McCartney, Cheryl Cole, Katherine Jenkins, Julian Lloyd Webber, Leona Lewis, Robbie Williams, Lily Allen, MIKA, Dizzee Rascal, Muse, Dame Shirley Bassey, Snow Patrol and Take That, and", "id": "20358667" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na celebrity gala with all proceeds going to the charities associated with Children in Need. Barlow also donated all proceeds from his event to the Prince's Trust charity. He said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get the support they need, especially at the moment.\" In August 2013, the headline act to turn on the Blackpool illuminations pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances leaving the event with no one to", "id": "570614" }, { "contents": "Take That\n\n\nOwen and Donald were set to perform a special one-off show in Jersey after a fan bid more than £1.2 million to win a performance from the band. This then turned in to a ticketed charity event where the money from tickets sold would go towards benefiting Children in Need. The auction was held on BBC Radio 2. On 11 November 2017, Take That began their foreign tour in Perth, Australia, the first time they have performed in the country in over twenty years. They also played in New Zealand", "id": "7692264" }, { "contents": "Born This Way (album)\n\n\nfor the first time. She continued performances at the 2011 MTV Europe Music Awards in Belfast, Northern Ireland, British TV shows \"The X Factor\" and \"\", Children in Need Rocks Manchester telethon in Manchester and the 2012 Grammy Awards nomination concert in Los Angeles. Songs from the album were also performed on a Thanksgiving television special \"A Very Gaga Thanksgiving\", aired on November 24. Gaga headlined KIIS-FM Jingle Ball at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on December 3, as well as Z100's Jingle", "id": "21624181" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2006\n\n\nChildren in Need 2006 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November and was hosted by Terry Wogan, Natasha Kaplinsky, Fearne Cotton and Chris Moyles. The voice over reading out money raised at various points was Alan Dedicoat. On average, the broadcast brought in 7.72m viewers and raised a total of £18,300,392 by the closing minute. Emma Bunton recorded the official single for 2006's appeal. The", "id": "12323327" }, { "contents": "Let Me Go (Gary Barlow song)\n\n\nBBC Radio 2 and Heart Radio, with Barlow being in attendance for both radio spins. \"Let Me Go\" was soon placed on the Radio 2 A Playlist and continues to be listed. Barlow also performed on the sixth live results show of \"The X Factor\" on 17 November 2013. In addition, he performed the track on \"The Jonathan Ross Show\" on 23 November 2013. \"Let Me Go\" entered the UK Singles Chart at number 3 with 72,423 copies sold in its first week on sale,", "id": "4336256" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nDoctor Who: A Celebration was a concert performed for the BBC's annual \"Children In Need\" charity appeal at the Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff on 19 November 2006. It featured suites of incidental music composed by Murray Gold from the first two series of the revived television show \"Doctor Who\", along with the reworked Doctor Who theme music. The suites were accompanied visually by clips from episodes related to the pieces. The show was hosted by David Tennant and featured the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ben Foster", "id": "2803508" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n, which also sold out instantly. It was also revealed by ticket marketplace SeatWave, that Gary Barlow's solo shows had sold six times more tickets than Robbie Williams' solo concerts, despite being on sale for a week less. In September 2013, Barlow announced via his Twitter account that he would be releasing his first full-length solo album in 14 years, on 25 November 2013. Barlow encouraged his followers and fans to tweet #GBSOLO to reveal the album artwork and title, with their profile pictures being used to", "id": "570576" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nGary Barlow in Concert was the first full solo tour that Gary Barlow had performed in over 13 years. Leg 1 saw him performing songs from his \"incredible music career spanning over 20 years\" in front of a sell out audience, whilst also raising money for The Prince's Trust and The Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry during two nights at the Royal Albert Hall. It was announced on 15 October 2012 that Barlow would go on a full solo tour for his second leg of shows, lasting two months around the", "id": "10489455" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nUK and Ireland. Gary Barlow first teased about the first two concerts via his Twitter account, stating that he would be announcing \"something special\" soon. Soon after Barlow announced that he would play the Royal Albert Hall for two nights in December with all proceeds of the tour and merchandise sold that evening going directly to The Prince's Trust youth charity. Barlow said: \"I hope the money raised through these concerts will make a real difference to young lives. It's really important to me that disadvantaged young people get", "id": "10489456" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2012\n\n\nChildren in Need 2012 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2012 marks the 32nd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 16 November until the early hours of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also includes regular regional opt-outs presented from", "id": "7710159" }, { "contents": "Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsongs. On 4 June, Ariana Grande hosted a benefit concert in Manchester, entitled \"One Love Manchester\" at Old Trafford Cricket Ground that was broadcast live on television, radio and social media. At the concert, Grande performed along with several other high-profile artists. Free tickets were offered to those who had attended the show on 22 May. The benefit concert and associated Red Cross fund raised £10 million for victims of the attack by early June and £17 million by August. \"New York Magazine\"s Vulture section", "id": "6854228" }, { "contents": "Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert\n\n\ntheir tickets and wristbands for entry. Hundreds of fans with General Admission tickets arrived at the O2 Arena days in advance with the hopes of being front and center for such a landmark occasion. As the concert was expected to be Led Zeppelin's last, a number of celebrities attended the gig, including Joe Elliott, Chad Smith, Dave Grohl, BBC Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles & Fearne Cotton, Mark Butler, Brett Hull, Chris Evans, Bob Harris, Ilan Rubin, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Brian May,", "id": "4462365" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nwas also streamed online. Radio broadcasters were provided the concert through the BBC World Service's programme distribution network. Stations that broadcast the concert were invited to make donations through the British Red Cross. The concert was streamed live online across a number of websites and apps, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. The 50,000-capacity venue sold out within 20 minutes. Approximately 14,000 people who attended the original Ariana Grande concert were eligible for free tickets for the One Love Manchester concert. However, approximately 10,000 additional applications, from people ineligible", "id": "7933386" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2011\n\n\nChildren in Need 2011 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. 2011 marked the 31st anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One which began on the evening of Friday 18 November and ran until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Alesha Dixon and Fearne Cotton as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from BBC Television Centre in London but also included regular regional opt-outs presented from various", "id": "7275149" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\na fan of town and has now stepped in during our hour of need.\" Barlow announced in September 2013 that he would once again be returning with Children in Need Rocks, bringing some of the world's biggest musical and entertainment stars together over 2 nights to raise money for Children in Need. He said of the event: \"I’m very excited that these incredible artists are giving their time for a special Charity that is close to my heart.\" In October 2013, Barlow travelled directly from the X Factor live", "id": "570617" }, { "contents": "Steve Sidwell (musician)\n\n\nBruce Forsyth's Hall of Fame, BBC \"The Voice\" series 1 and 2, \"Robbie Williams Live at the Albert\", \"The Robbie Williams TV Special\", \"Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall\", \"Children in Need Rock the MEN\", \"Children in Need Rocks for Terry\", the \"BBC Olympic Handover Concert\", \"Victoria Wood’s Christmas Special\", \"Victoria's Empire\", Chris Moyles' \"Big Quiz Night\", \"Ant & Dec's Christmas", "id": "10408081" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nas Silver by the BPI, while also charting in 21 countries worldwide. Barlow announced in January 2011 that he was to hold a solo concert entitled GB40 at the Shepherd's Bush Empire to celebrate his 40th birthday and his 20 years in the music industry with all money going to the Prince's Trust charity. Barlow was joined by guest appearances from Chris Martin, Ellie Goulding, Midge Ure and his bandmates from Take That, while also receiving recorded birthday messages from a number of celebrities such as Chris Moyles, Peter Kay,", "id": "570568" }, { "contents": "Agnetha Fältskog\n\n\nThe digital single included two new mixes by Smash Mode. \"Dance Your Pain Away\" was released internationally as a single on 15 July 2013. On 17 May 2013, Fältskog was awarded the SKAP 2013 Kai Gullmar Memorial Award at the Stockholm release party for 'A'. On 12 November 2013, Fältskog sang live on stage for the first time in 25 years at the BBC Children in Need Rocks 2013 concert in London; she sang a duet with Gary Barlow, the organiser of the event. On 18 November 2013", "id": "1877754" }, { "contents": "Gotta Be You (One Direction song)\n\n\nand kisses her. The clip attracted positive commentary from fans of the group. One Direction performed the single for the first time on \"The X Factor UK\" on 13 November 2011, to open the BBC's \"Children in Need 2011\" telethon on 19 November 2011, and at Capital FM's \"Jingle Bell Ball\" on 4 December 2011, at the O Arena. One Direction also performed the track during their first headlining concert tour, Up All Night Tour. \"Gotta Be You\" was performed as", "id": "20895781" }, { "contents": "Horrible Histories Prom\n\n\nHorrible Histories Prom (televised as \"Horrible Histories' Big Prom Party\") was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series \"Horrible Histories\", along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series. Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus (the black rat puppet \"host\" of the TV series) presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were", "id": "16907506" }, { "contents": "Chris Moyles\n\n\nin an episode of the genealogy documentary series \"Who Do You Think You Are?\" on BBC One where he explored his Irish ancestry. He visited Ireland and Belgium, where his great-grandfather fought and died in the First World War. On the programme Moyles discovered that his surname means \"bald servant\" from the Irish \"\"Ó Maolmanach\"\". He also co-presented Children in Need Rocks Manchester in November 2011. Moyles appeared on the quiz show \"The Million Pound Drop\" along with Andi Peters", "id": "21012965" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\npraised Barlow and stated that \"Gary Barlow would have had sweaty palms before his performance last night. It was his biggest solo gig in over a decade. But he more than proved his worth just ten seconds in, opening with Greatest Day to a standing ovation.\" BBC reviewed the concert positively, calling it a \"triumphant show\" and praising Barlow's songs stating that they are \"greeted with the rapture they deserve\" whilst calling him the \"most successful songwriter of his generation.\" In an article the next", "id": "10489464" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\ncan give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way\". The One Love Manchester concert was subsequently announced for 4 June at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, with Grande being joined by artists including Coldplay, Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Take That, Miley Cyrus and Pharrell Williams. Proceeds aided the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, established after the attack by Manchester City Council and the British Red Cross. Tickets for the event sold out within twenty minutes of going on sale. In addition,", "id": "7078839" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nRaton, Florida. On 26 May, she announced that she would host a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of the attack. Event tickets were made available on 1 June 2017 for £40, and sold with no booking fees. These tickets sold out within 6 minutes of going on sale. Fans who were at the concert of 22 May could apply to attend at no cost. The application ended on 31 May at 17:00, but was extended till 22:00 to allow as many people at the concert on the 22nd", "id": "7933379" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who Prom (2008)\n\n\nfourth series of the television programme. Catherine Tate, who played the Doctor's companion Donna Noble in the 2006 \"Doctor Who\" Christmas special and the fourth series of the programme, made a surprise guest appearance to introduce \"Donna's Theme\", not having been listed as being a presenter in the lineup. Sarah Walker presented BBC Radio 3's coverage of the concert. The full concert was rehearsed on Saturday, 26 July, the day before the performance. (At the 2006 \"Children in Need\" concert in", "id": "13143293" }, { "contents": "Lloyd Wade\n\n\n\"Somebody Please\". Wade enjoyed top 5 chart success dueting with Eliza Doolittle on her hit single Pack Up and has appeared with her on TV and radio shows across Europe throughout 2010 and 2011. Wade Provided singers for the background vocal choirs for X factor in Series 4 and 5,(2007/2008) and on series 8 (2011) he joined the X factor vocal coaching team as an associate vocal coach working with the judges, Gary Barlow, Louis Walsh, Kelly Rowland, and Tulisa Contostavlos. Series finalists he worked with were little", "id": "4523294" }, { "contents": "Help for Heroes\n\n\nto waive VAT on this sale of these singles.\" This was held on 12 September 2010 at Twickenham Stadium in London, and featured, among others, Robbie Williams, Gary Barlow, Peter Kay, Tom Jones and Pixie Lott. The concert was shown live on BBC One and was presented by Cat Deeley. At Easter 2011, the first Convoy for Heroes event took place at Gaydon in Warwickshire, to raise money for Help for Heroes. Organised by Land Rover enthusiasts, Convoy for Heroes took the form of a world", "id": "15328520" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who\n\n\nBBC National Orchestra of Wales from the 2005 Christmas episode \"The Christmas Invasion\" onwards. A concert featuring the orchestra performing music from the first two series took place on 19 November 2006 to raise money for Children in Need. David Tennant hosted the event, introducing the different sections of the concert. Murray Gold and Russell T Davies answered questions during the interval and Daleks and Cybermen appeared whilst music from their stories was played. The concert aired on BBCi on Christmas Day 2006. A Doctor Who Prom was celebrated on 27 July", "id": "8220916" }, { "contents": "Taking Back the Cities Tour\n\n\nfor the iTunes Festival were not available for general sale. Tickets could only be won by entering a competition, which could be found on iTunes' Facebook page. The official website later held a competition as a \"final chance\" for fans to win tickets to the event. Tickets for the show at The Rockhal were priced at €35 each (standing). Tickets for the BBC Children in Need concert could only be won by a ballot. Interested fans were required to register on the Children in Need website, between", "id": "10018119" }, { "contents": "Sunday for Sammy\n\n\nSunday for Sammy is a series of biennial charity concerts held in aid of the Sammy Johnson Memorial Fund, which benefits young performers. The fund was established in memorial to Sammy Johnson, an actor from North East England, who died suddenly in 1998. The concerts have been held at Newcastle City Hall, with the exception of 2006, when the show was hosted at The Sage Gateshead. Due to the popularity of tickets, the 2018 event will be held at Metro Radio Arena. The show is performed twice on one day", "id": "2498239" }, { "contents": "BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend\n\n\nspecial multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day. Saturday 23 June The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event. 20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority", "id": "7725267" }, { "contents": "JLS\n\n\nhave appeared on every Children in need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single Love You More went to Children in Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met seven-year-old Emily who suffers from Osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"children in need rocks Manchester\" concert performing Take a Chance on Me. In 2013 Aston appeared on Children In Need for the last time as a member of JLS where the group sang a medley of JLS songs", "id": "16421590" }, { "contents": "Super Show 7\n\n\npromotion for their eighth studio album, \"Play\". Tickets for the December 16–17 concert in Seoul went on sale on 21 November and were sold out in 9 minutes. Later, the group added one more day on December 15 due to high demand and the tickets went on sale on 26 November at 8PM KST. The concert on 15 December marks the 120th Super Show concert in the Super Show series. The concert in Singapore was announced on December 1 by ONE Production after 2 years of the last concert held in Singapore", "id": "20119089" }, { "contents": "The Open Road Tour\n\n\nThe Open Road Tour was the first concert tour by British singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as a solo artist. The tour spanned the United Kingdom and Europe to promote his debut solo album \"Open Road\". The Open Road Tour took place in February and March 1998, and was Barlow's first solo tour in Europe and the UK. The first show at Symphony Hall sold out within two hours. Ticket sales at a subsequent show at the National Exhibition Centre were poor, with only half of the tickets sold after being", "id": "12233749" }, { "contents": "Radcliffe & Maconie\n\n\n, a music programme featuring repeats of old live concerts. This was carried out as a response to the BBC Trust, who dictated that Radio 2 must feature more live music. Radio 2 controller Bob Shennan made the decision to cut one of Radcliffe & Maconie's shows in order to make way for the repeats featured within 'In Concert'. On 1 February 2011 it was announced that the pair were to move to BBC Radio 6 Music to present a weekday show, starting on 4 April. The final show on Radio", "id": "16083957" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2016\n\n\nChildren in Need 2016 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 37th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 18 November until the early hours of Saturday 19 November. It was the first edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016. Dermot O'Leary, Fearne Cotton and Nick Grimshaw did not return for the 2016 telethon, and were replaced by Graham Norton, Ade Adepitan and", "id": "13077678" }, { "contents": "Aston Merrygold\n\n\na cause he feels strongly about after enduring racial bullying growing up. Merrygold has appeared on every Children in Need night since 2010. All sales from the JLS number one single \"Love You More\" went to Children In Need. In 2011 Merrygold did a VT for the charity in which he met 7-year-old Emily who suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta. In 2012 JLS performed at the \"Children in Need Rocks Manchester\" concert performing \"Take a Chance on Me\". In 2013, Merrygold appeared on Children in Need for", "id": "17179724" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nbroadcast live on BBC One, BBC Radio and Capital FM networks. Television coverage on BBC One was presented by Sara Cox and Ore Oduba, with Nick Grimshaw and Anita Rani hosting from backstage and within the crowd. BBC Radio coverage consisted of a simultaneous broadcast, hosted by Scott Mills, Jo Whiley, Phil Williams and Becky Want, on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Radio Manchester respectively. BBC World Service also transmitted the concert live. The BBC announced that it would broadcast the", "id": "7933384" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Fantasies\n\n\nonce the tickets were sold out, a second performance was added for September 11, 2009 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen. Ticket sales for the initial concert began on January 17, and half of them were sold within a week, with the remainder sold by April 2, 2009. The concert was preceded by a Meet and Greet session that included the original composers as well as the arrangement team and guest artists for the show. The concerts were performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne and WDR Radio Choir Cologne,", "id": "13086917" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nentire concert even if it overran its intended three-hour duration, which it did by approximately 20 minutes. At least 65 British radio stations broadcast the event live, including 39 Global music stations: the entire Capital FM, Heart FM, Gold, Radio X and Smooth Radio networks. Broadcasters in at least 38 countries screened the concert live, despite the time zone differences. The BBC was the host broadcaster for international television networks, and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) distributed the concert to its radio members, which", "id": "7933385" }, { "contents": "Marry the Night\n\n\non the eighth series of \"The X Factor\" on November 13, 2011, and performed the song. Whilst singing, she emerged from a confessional dressed as a decapitated corpse, carrying her own head. She sang most of the song before returning to the booth and re-appearing in a leotard-like outfit and performed the rest of the song and a dance routine with her dancers. At the Children in Need Rocks Manchester concert on November 17, 2011, \"Marry the Night\" was performed as the final", "id": "2541963" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2017\n\n\nChildren in Need 2017 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. It was the 38th Children in Need appeal show which was broadcast live on BBC One on the evening of Friday 17 November until the early hours of Saturday 18 November. It was the second edition of the televised campaign since original presenter Terry Wogan's death in January 2016 last year. Greg James and Russell Kane didn't return for the 2017 telethon, and were replaced by Mel Giedroyc The culmination of Children in", "id": "9928782" }, { "contents": "Doctor Who: A Celebration\n\n\nto accompany the broadcast of \"The Runaway Bride\". The Christmas edition of \"Doctor Who Confidential\" focused on the concert. By the end of the evening, the concert had raised over £52,000 for the appeal, via ticketing and events including an auction of props and memorabilia. Throughout the Doctor Who Fan base fraternity, Doctor Who: A Celebration is one of the most sought after recordings. Due to the main transmission being via the BBC Red Button Service, many fans did not know the show was being broadcast", "id": "2803510" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\nChildren in Need 2013 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2013 marks the 33rd anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 15 November until the early hours of Saturday 16 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Zoe Ball and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. The show was broadcast from the BBC in Elstree but also includes regular regional opt-", "id": "10619587" }, { "contents": "Cheryl (singer)\n\n\nthe UK's other major charity telethon Comic Relief. The song was recorded at Comic Relief co-founder and trustee Richard Curtis' request. In March 2009, Cheryl climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in aid of Comic Relief. The climb, organised by Gary Barlow, was also undertaken by fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberley Walsh, as well as Alesha Dixon, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Ronan Keating and Barlow himself. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Cheryl, Walsh, Barlow, Moyles", "id": "5656427" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2007\n\n\nChildren in Need 2007 was a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for Children in Need. It culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One on the evening of Friday 16 November, through to the morning of Saturday 17 November. The broadcast was hosted by Terry Wogan and Fearne Cotton, joined by other guest presenters throughout the night. The voice over reading out hourly totals was Alan Dedicoat. The event broke all previous records with a total of £19,089,771 raised by the closing minute. The show's average audience", "id": "12323296" }, { "contents": "Matt Cardle\n\n\nUK on 17 October 2011. Cardle said he was nervous about releasing his album as previous male \"X Factor\" winners have not been very successful, and female winners Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke enjoyed massive success. Whilst working on the album Cardle collaborated with various writers including Eg White and James Walsh. The album's first single, \"Run For Your Life,\" written by Gary Barlow, was premiered on The Chris Moyles Show on 5 September 2011. Cardle appeared on the BBC Breakfast show on 1 September to give", "id": "424320" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\ninvites you into the front row of the gig, where Gary takes you on a two-hour musical spectacular journey as he and his band perform Take That hits alongside his solo material, old and new. DVD/Blu-ray Release: It was announced that Charles, Prince of Wales, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge would attend one of the concerts and would meet and greet Barlow before and after the show. The media and fans alike praised the", "id": "10489462" }, { "contents": "Radio 1 Roadshow\n\n\nMarine Parade, Brighton with Chris Moyles in 1999. As part of reforms to the station, the Radio 1 Roadshow was axed in 2000 in favour of a series of one-day pop concerts, called One Big Sunday. These have now been replaced by a single two-day event called BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend. The style of the event is more akin to a standalone music festival than the broadcasting-based shows of old. The emphasis is on current artists and new music. Since the Radio 1 Roadshow", "id": "7777062" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nsale for a week less. It was announced that the date at the O2 Apollo on 6 December 2012 would be filmed for TV broadcast on ITV on New Years Day at 9pm for a TV special entitled Gary Barlow and Friends. The show features guest appearances from JLS, Peter Kay, Nicole Scherzinger, James Corden and Mark Owen. Barlow also announced via has Twitter account that there would be a DVD released of the tour. The official announcement of the DVD appeared on the Take That website which said: 'To", "id": "10489460" }, { "contents": "One Love Manchester\n\n\nfor free tickets, caused delays in ticket processing. The concert averaged 10.9 million viewers on BBC One, peaking at 14.5 million viewers. 22.6 million people watched at least three minutes of the programme on BBC One, making it the UK's most-watched television event of 2017. The concert reached an audience share of 49.3 percent in overall viewers, 69 percent of adults 16–24 and 61 percent in the demographic of 25–34 year-olds. Consolidated 7-day figures put the average UK viewership at 11.63 million. BBC iPlayer registered more", "id": "7933387" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow in Concert (2011 concert tour)\n\n\nbecause Barlow the artist doesn’t need any exposure: this is a songwriter who has colonised the charts for 20 years. But tonight, the air thick with screams, was his chance to hog the limelight with his carousel of hits. Just minutes in, Greatest Day, one of Take That's comeback hits, had the crowd throwing shapes. Barlow then took to the piano for his vaguely religious solo number, Open Road, inviting further applause. But it was the old ones, Back for Good and Everything Changes,", "id": "10489466" }, { "contents": "Symphonic Game Music Concerts\n\n\n2009. In February 2008, Thomas Böcker mentioned some considerations about a continuation of the \"Symphonic Game Music Concert\" series in Cologne. The plans were later confirmed by Winfried Fechner who announced \"Symphonic Fantasies\", a video game music concert that took place in the Cologne Philharmonic Hall on 12 September 2009. Tickets for the event sold out quickly, necessitating a second concert at the König-Pilsener-Arena in Oberhausen, on 11 September 2009. In addition to the live performances, the concert saw a radio broadcast on", "id": "16115883" }, { "contents": "Red Nose Day 2009\n\n\nBarlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.5 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of BBC Radio 1 (a record for the station.) All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday, 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton,", "id": "11954773" }, { "contents": "Children in Need\n\n\nNeed is one of three high profile British telethons. It is the only charity belonging to the BBC, the other telethons being Red Nose Day and Sport Relief, both supporting Comic Relief. Following the temporary closure of Television Centre, the telethon broadcasts take place at the BBC Elstree Centre. The BBC's first broadcast charity appeal took place in 1927, in the form of a five-minute radio broadcast on Christmas Day. It raised about £1,342, which equates to about £69,950 by today's standards, and was", "id": "2339828" }, { "contents": "Robbie Williams\n\n\n, which featured seven songs from Williams's solo career, became the biggest-selling concert in UK history, selling 1.34 million tickets in less than 24 hours. In late 2011, Take That's frontman Gary Barlow confirmed that Williams had left the band for a second time to focus on his solo career, although the departure was amicable and that Williams was welcome to rejoin Take That in the future. He has since performed with Take That on three separate television appearances, and has collaborated with Gary Barlow on a number of", "id": "17938878" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nPlaying live is my favourite thing and I haven't played a solo show for over a year now. Last year playing two London shows was brilliant, we all had such a good time, so I thought right let's get out and see the rest of the country!\" The tickets to Barlow's solo concerts sold out \"instantly\" after going on sale on 19 October, with tickets selling faster than those of the Rolling Stones for their comeback dates. Demand was so high for tickets that Barlow added more dates", "id": "570575" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2014\n\n\nChildren in Need 2014 is a campaign held in the United Kingdom to raise money for the charity Children in Need. 2014 marks the 34th anniversary of the appeal which culminated in a live broadcast on BBC One and BBC Two on the evening of Friday 14 November until the early hours of Saturday 15 November. The broadcast was hosted by Sir Terry Wogan, with Tess Daly, Fearne Cotton, Rochelle Humes and Nick Grimshaw as co-hosts. Shane Richie hosted the period the show was broadcast on BBC Two. The show was", "id": "2192575" }, { "contents": "Labrinth\n\n\nand her comeback single \"Neva Soft\". It was revealed in September 2011 that Labrinth was to appear on the Children in Need 2011 charity single, \"Teardrop\", a cover of the Massive Attack song by the same name. Under the name 'The Collective', Labrinth appeared as one of many artists assembled by Take That member Gary Barlow, which included Chipmunk, Wretch 32, Mz. Bratt, Dot Rotten, Rizzle Kicks, Ed Sheeran, Ms. Dynamite and Tulisa Contostavlos. The single, which was performed", "id": "2248633" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\nand live video streaming, available in Germany. On 9 July 2011, the WDR Radio Orchestra presented \"Symphonic Odysseys\" at the Philharmonic Hall in Cologne. The concert exclusively paid homage to the work of composer Nobuo Uematsu. Tickets went on sale 1 December 2010 and sold out within 12 hours, prompting the producers to announce a second concert to be performed at 3 p.m. on the same day. With both concerts sold out, \"Symphonic Odysseys\" marked the biggest video game music event in Germany so far. The \"", "id": "21652350" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\n2013 Barlow's discovery A*M*E released her first single which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart. Gary Barlow has since closed down the record label to focus on his own career and family commitments. On 7 May 2011, it was announced that Barlow was in advanced talks to replace Simon Cowell as a judge on \"The X Factor\". He was officially confirmed as a judge on 30 May, alongside the returning Louis Walsh and fellow new judges N-Dubz's Tulisa and Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland,", "id": "570590" }, { "contents": "The Seagull (theatre)\n\n\nmodel Abi Titmuss as Lady Macbeth, while in 2010 singer Jessie Buckley from the BBC TV show \"I'd Do Anything\" performed at the theatre. In 2011 folk musician Jez Lowe from BBC Radio 2 did a show at the theatre, as did the comedian and folk singer Richard Digance in 2015. Today the theatre hosts a varied programme of plays, concerts, charity events, films and live music shows throughout the year showcasing local talent and regional and national touring theatre companies, musicians and entertainers. In addition to the", "id": "16025654" }, { "contents": "Reactions to the Manchester Arena bombing\n\n\nsome tickets were reserved for people who had been at the Manchester Arena Concert. Following an attack in London a day before the show, Greater Manchester Police announced that security would be tighter than planned. The concert was televised, and watched by more than 100 million people worldwide. It raised proceeds exceeding £10 million ($13 million) in the twelve hours following its conclusion. Following the concert Grande re-released her 2014 single \"One Last Time\", with proceeds going to the We Love Manchester appeal. The", "id": "7078840" }, { "contents": "Gregory Porter\n\n\n, London. He would go on to perform in the annual \"BBC Children in Need\" show in November, a night dedicated to Sir Terry Wogan, who hosted it in previous years and was a fan of Porter. In January 2017 Porter performed the song \"Holding On\" on BBC One's \"The Graham Norton Show\". In September 2017 he performed as part of the \"Later... with Jools Holland: Later 25\" concert at the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2017 he performed the song \"Mona", "id": "9418211" }, { "contents": "Gary Barlow\n\n\nso offered Barlow a substantial increase on his £1.5 million salary from the previous year to ensure that he returned to the panel. On 17 April 2012, it was announced that Barlow would return to \"The X Factor\" for a second year; he was the first judge to be announced to be returning. He was later joined by the returning Louis Walsh on the judging panel, alongside Tulisa and the Pussycat Dolls' Nicole Scherzinger, who replaced Destiny's Child's Kelly Rowland after one series. For his second year", "id": "570592" }, { "contents": "Merregnon Studios\n\n\n2011), and Niklas Willén (2010, 2012). In late 2007, Thomas Böcker announced that he was producing \"Symphonic Shades\", a concert exclusively dedicated to the music of German game composer Chris Hülsbeck, taking place on 23 August 2008. Tickets for it were sold out after six days, prompting the producers to schedule a second concert that would be performed to another sold-out audience at 11 p.m. on the same day of the \"Symphonic Shades\" world premiere. The event marked the first live radio", "id": "21652345" }, { "contents": "Passenger (singer)\n\n\nSheeran on his four out of five sell out dates in Ireland in January 2013 and in Australia and New Zealand in early 2013, and supported Sheeran in his Brighton dates and in Reading. Rosenberg performed \"All the Little Lights\" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at the Hammersmith Apollo in London, broadcast on BBC One on 14 November. On 24 March 2014, Passenger unveiled \"Whispers\", the title track of his new album, as part of his set at the Teenage Cancer Trust charity concert at the Royal", "id": "3684340" }, { "contents": "Let Them Talk (Hugh Laurie album)\n\n\nsongs in a small New Orleans club in March 2011, and started officially touring with these materials on April 2011 with two consecutive live concerts in Germany. In the UK, he performed at the Union Chapel in London, at the Cheltenham Jazz Festival, Warwick Arts Centre in Coventry, and at Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music. Laurie also made several television appearances, including BBC2 programmes \"The Graham Norton Show\" and \"Later... with Jools Holland\", and was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's \"Chris Evans", "id": "8075500" }, { "contents": "Ellie Goulding\n\n\n, one dollar for each sale of her mixtape was donated to the \"Free the Children\" charity. On 1 June 2013, Goulding performed at Gucci's global concert event in London whose campaign \"Chime for Change\" aims to raise awareness of women's issues in terms of education, health and justice. Goulding has frequently contributed to the BBC's annual charity telethon Children in Need in the UK. In 2013, Goulding's track \"How Long Will I Love You\" was the official single for the 2013 Children in", "id": "13785067" }, { "contents": "Diamond Jubilee Concert\n\n\n9pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day. Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert. Gary Barlow and the BBC spent six months planning the concert and 10,000 free tickets for the concert were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot. A total of 1.2 million applications", "id": "16458370" }, { "contents": "Children in Need 2013\n\n\n31.1 million on the night. The campaign for the year ended in July 2014 when it was announced that the entire campaign raised £49.6 million. The culmination of Children in Need was the live telethon broadcast on BBC One on 15 November from the BBC Elstree Centre. Viewers could donate throughout the night by telephone, online, the 'iPudsey' mobile app or at a later date from amenities such as banks or by post. Kylie Minogue, Emeli Sandé, Tom Jones, Miranda Hart, Gary Barlow, Hugh Dennis,", "id": "10619589" }, { "contents": "What Makes You Beautiful\n\n\nThe number corresponded to a ticket held by a fan from the tube; the colour of the fan's shirt was the correct answer for the \"Red or Black?\" challenge. The band performed \"What Makes You Beautiful\" after its B-side, \"Na Na Na\", at the BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards on 9 October 2011. The band also performed the song to open telethon \"Children in Need 2011\" on 19 November 2011. After \"Gotta Be You\" and \"One Thing\"", "id": "6407295" }, { "contents": "Final Straw Tour\n\n\nwith members of The Darkness, Starsailor and Goldie Lookin Chain for the 10th annual \"Soccer Six\". The event was held in aid of The Prince's Trust and Give a Child a Chance. The event was held at Reading F.C.'s Madejski Stadium. In November 2004, the band played a short 20-minute set as part of BBC's Children in Need. The performance of \"Run\" was televised during BBC's coverage of the event. In January 2005, Snow Patrol played a charity concert in Cardiff in aid of", "id": "12571310" } ]
The Jablanica ( [START_ENT] Serbian [END_ENT] : Јабланица , ) is an river in southern Serbia . A left tributary of the South ( or Južna ) Morava river , it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia 's Jablanica District , with the region contributing about one third of the district 's area . The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain , near the village of Grbavce , on the administrative border of the Kosovo province . The area is rich in thermal springs , so several spas are located near the river : Stara Banja , Ravna Banja and Sijarina with popular Sijarinska Banja . At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary Čokotinska reka ( Cyrillic : Чокотинска река ) , turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point . The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the and Radan mountains , in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the in Kosovo . The river flows eastward , passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo , before reaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac , part of the depression of Leskovac , which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava . In the region , near Lebane , a famed archeological find of ( Iustiniana Prima ) is located . The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo , Vranovce , Bošnjace , Turekovac and Stopanje , reaches Vinarce , the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac , and turns north . First it flows parallel to the Veternica river , to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje , then parallel to the Južna Morava . After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava . From Pečenjevce , a parallel flow ( canal ) begins , connecting the Jablanica and s , some 15 km to the north . Through Južna Morava , the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin , draining an area of 895 km ² itself . It 's not navigable and has an average discharge of 6 m ³ / s , which in rainy years grows much higher , so the river floods its valley causing lots of material damage . The name of the river , Jablanica , in Serbian means the
f50f6ac2-273b-4e8a-aa37-f73dba3a4e02_river:0
[{"answer": "Serbian language", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "75595", "title": "Serbian language"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nreaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac, part of the depression of Leskovac, which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. In the region, near Lebane, a famed archeological find of Caričin grad (\"Iustiniana Prima\") is located. The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo, Vranovce, Bošnjace, Turekovac and Stopanje, reaches Vinarce, the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac", "id": "3481303" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\n, and turns north. First it flows parallel to the Veternica river, to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje, then parallel to the Južna Morava. After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava. From Pečenjevce, a parallel flow (canal) begins, connecting the Jablanica and Toplica rivers, some 15 km to the north. Through Južna Morava, the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, draining an area of itself. It's not navigable", "id": "3481304" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\npopular Sijarinska Banja. At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary \"Čokotinska reka\" (Cyrillic: \"Чокотинска река\"), turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point. The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the Majdan and Radan mountains, in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the District of Priština in Kosovo. The river flows eastward, passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo, before", "id": "3481302" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nThe Jablanica (, ) is an river in southern Serbia. A left tributary of the South (or Južna) Morava river, it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia's Jablanica District, with the region contributing about one third of the district's area. The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain, near the village of Grbavce, on the border with Kosovo. The area is rich in thermal springs, so several spas are located near the river: Stara Banja, Ravna Banja and Sijarina with", "id": "3481301" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nJablanica with third parallel flow, the \"Sušica\", being formed in between. Settlements include many small villages, like Vina, Bukova Gora, Miroševce, Žabljane, Beli Potok and Strojkovce. In the Leskovac field, the river gently turns north, receives the Sušica from the left and reaches the town of Leskovac. The Veternica continues northward, being connected to the Jablanica river by the canal at the village of Bogojevce, before it empties into the Južna Morava. The Veternica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its", "id": "11539775" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nThe Veternica (Serbian Cyrillic: Ветерница, ) is a river in southern Serbia, a 75 km long left tributary to the Južna Morava, which gives the name to the region surrounding its valley. The Veternica originates from the Grot peak, the southernmost part of the Kukavica mountain. Four smaller streams meet at the village of Vlase and continue to the north as the Veternica. The river flows next to the villages of Golemo Selo, Oštra Glava and Gagince, where it flows parallel to the Jablanica river. As the Veternica", "id": "11539773" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nbends to the northeast, it enters the low Veternica region, part of the Leskovac field in the composite valley of the Južna Morava. Small region, located between the Kukavica mountain on the south and the Jablanica region on the north, is divided in two micro-regions, upper one being centered on the small town of Vučje (which is not located on the river itself) while the center of the lower micro-region is the town of Leskovac. As it enters the region, the Veternica furthers away from the", "id": "11539774" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nthe west, Kukavica and Čemernik in the south and Babička Gora, Seličevica and Suva Planina to the east. The largest river in the region of Leskovac is the South Morava River, which flows south to north. Tributaries of the South Morava are: the Vlasina river, which collects water from Lake Vlasina and flows through Crna Trava and Vlasotince; the Veternica river, which flows through Leskovac; the Jablanica river, which springs from the foot of Goljak and flows through Medveđa and Lebane; the Pusta (Deserted) river,", "id": "2857704" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nof 590 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and is not navigable. The region of Pusta Reka mostly correspondence with the river's watershed. It is located between the Pasjača mountain and lower Toplica region (on the north), the Southern Pomoravlje (Field of Leskovac, on the east), the Jablanica region (on the south) and the Radan mountain (on the west). The region is an agricultural area, almost without any industry, except for some smaller facilities in regional center, Bojnik", "id": "12523581" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nof Podina, Voljčince, Badnjevac and the smaller regional center Žitorađa. After the Toplica reaches municipal center of Doljevac, it enters the most densely populated part of the south Pomoravlje, turns north and flows into the Južna Morava at the village of Orljane, across the medieval ruins of Kurvin grad, as Južna Morava's longest left tributary. The Toplica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its own drainage area of 2,217 km². The river is not navigable. The river valley is a major traffic route in southern Serbia as", "id": "19530454" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nThe Sokobanjska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Сокобањска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in central eastern Serbia, a 58 km-long right tributary to the Južna Morava river. The Sokobanjska Moravica originates from the eastern slopes of the Devica mountain, near the village of Skrobnica. The river flows to the north, turns westward at the village of Levovik and enters the Banja region. The rivers flows between the northern slopes of the Devica and Ozren mountains (on the south) and southern slopes of the Rtanj mountain", "id": "1726356" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\nmouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. As the wider Jabllanica region, Medveđa also had an Albanian majority. These Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces in a way that today would be characterized as ethnic cleansing. Due to depopulation and economic considerations some small numbers of Albanians were allowed to stay and return though not to their previous settlements and instead were designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of", "id": "7117787" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\n, a notable Muslim population existed in the districts of Niš, Pirot, Vranje, Leskovac, Prokuplje and Kuršumlija. The rural parts of Toplica, Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the", "id": "1099558" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nthe southernmost slopes of the Suva Planina and Babička Gora mountains, it reaches the town of Vlasotince and western parts of the low Leskovac field, part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. After the villages of Batulovce and Stajkovce, the Vlasina empties into the Južna Morava, east of the Leskovac's eastern suburb of Mrštane. The Vlasina drains an area of 991 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin and it is not navigable. On 26 June 1988, after a period of heavy rains, Vlasina was a", "id": "14981332" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nThe Pusta River ( / \"Pusta reka\", \"Desolate River\") is a river in southern Serbia, a 71-km long left tributary to the South Morava. It also gives the name to the Pusta Reka region in its valley. The river originates northeast of Prolom Banja, near the Sokolovica village, on the northern tip of the Radan mountain, as the \"Golema River\" (\"Big River\"). It flows eastward, between the mountains of Radan (to the south) and Pasjača (to the", "id": "12523579" }, { "contents": "Persecution of Muslims during Ottoman contraction\n\n\nReka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the Turks were of Albanian origin. The Muslims in the cities of Niš and Pirot were Turkish-speaking; Vranje and Leskovac were Turkish- and Albanian-speaking; Prokuplje", "id": "8891598" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nvalley between Konjic and Jablanica, known simply as \"Neretva\" since Middle Ages, the new point for hydrographical division became dam of the Jablanica HPP where also is a place of confluence of the rivers Neretva and Rama. Here the Neretva river suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before it reach town of Jablanica. From this point it turns again toward south and enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes of the mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica", "id": "12890350" }, { "contents": "Rama (Neretva)\n\n\nRama is a river in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a major tributary of the Neretva. It joins it from the right by discharging into Neretva's artificial reservoir, Jablaničko lake, at place called Marina Pećina, near village of Gračac, between location of underground powerhouse of Rama Hydroelectric Power Station and Jablanica Dam, depending on water level in Jablaničko lake, some 15 kilometers upstream from Jablanica. The Rama flows through municipalities of Prozor-Rama and Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, while its headwaters together with wellsprings in the region of", "id": "3052779" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\nThe Kolubara (Serbian Cyrillic: Колубара, ), is a long river in western Serbia; it is an eastern, right tributary to the Sava river. Kolubara is formed by the two small rivers Obnica and Jablanica. \"Obnica\" is the river in Western Serbia that springs at the foot of the mountain Medvednik. It flows to the East, through the villages of Suvodanje, Bobova, Majinović, Pričević and Zlatarić, and at the city of Valjevo meets the river \"Jablanica\" and forms Kolubara. The Obnica is", "id": "20109582" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\ndating to the 4th century AD lay at various locations of the town, as it was a transitory zone of Upper Moesia; travel and postal stations are among the finds. Toponyms such as \"Arbanaška\" and \"Đjake\" shows an Albanian presence in the Toplica and Southern Morava regions (located north-east of contemporary Kosovo) before the expulsion of Albanians during 1877–1878 period. The rural parts of Jablanica valley and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river", "id": "7117786" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\naverage elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva again expands into a third and largest valley which provided fertile agricultural land before it was flooded by large artificial reservoir, Jablaničko Lake, formed after construction of a Jablanica Dam near town of Jablanica. The second section begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before reaches town of Jablanica, from which point turns again toward south. From", "id": "12890343" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nLebane () is a town and municipality located in Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 10,062 inhabitants, while the municipality has 20,000 inhabitants. The town is located at the confluence of the rivers Jablanica and Šumanska Reka, in the alluvial plain created by the former. Just northeast of the town a larger plain called Leskovačko polje extends toward the town of Leskovac, which is the district seat. The elevation of the town of Lebane is between 275.2 and 420 MASL.", "id": "17523929" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nRakic writes about it as a \"\"big village populated by Serbs, in a valley, on the river Jablanica, on its left bank.\"\" Only when Lebane got the role of Jablanica district headquarters, it began to gradually develop in a direction of a small town. The core of this small town was a series of houses along the Jablanica which is 45m wide here (as is even now); at the end of this series are the buildings of the Court and Municipality. The main feature of", "id": "17523931" }, { "contents": "Štulac (Lebane)\n\n\nthe village of Prekopčelica. The village is located on the valley slopes of the Caričin Potok creek. It is scattered between the altitudes of . It is situated in the wider Pusta Reka region. The village rests on the western slopes of the , which here divides the regions of Pusta Reka and Jablanica. On the west, the easternmost slopes of the Radan mountain begin. The village area covers . The Slavs settled in the area in the 7th century, centering around the ruins of Iustiniana Prima. Due to the lack of", "id": "11151840" }, { "contents": "Grdelica\n\n\nGrdelica () is a town in southern Serbia. It is situated in the Leskovac municipality, in the Jablanica District. The total population of the town was 3,194 people as of the 2011 census. For census purposes, Grdelica is divided into two adjacent parts, southern \"Grdelica town\" (\"Grdelica varoš\"; population 2,136) and northern \"Grdelica village\" (\"Grdelica selo\"; 1,058). Grdelica lies at the South Morava river, on the mountainous terrain at the entrance of the Grdelica Gorge. It", "id": "460756" }, { "contents": "Gornji Bučumet\n\n\nall settlements registered separately in the census. The three settlements lie in the South Morava basin, above the Jablanica river, and as such are located in the Upper Jablanica region. The highest mountain in Upper Bučumet is Paramid (853), with the mountain of Sv. Petar (1149) being located in Middle Bučumet. The three neighbourhoods of Bučumet are 470 to 853 metres above sea level. There is a medieval church built on the ruins of an older church. During the Toplica-Jablanica Operation (, ) in", "id": "12752738" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nthe huge floods of its daughter river. The South Morava has 157 tributaries. The most important left tributaries are: Jablanica, Veternica, Pusta reka and Toplica. Right tributaries are: Vrla, Vlasina, Nišava (the longest) and Sokobanjska Moravica. The South Morava has a significant potential for electricity production, and a huge hydroelectrical system (Vlasina- Vrla I-IV power stations) has been constructed in its drainage basin. To a certain extent, its waters are used for irrigation. The river valley's most important role", "id": "15699476" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nThe Rasina () is a river in south central Serbia. The long river flows through the Rasina region, gives its name to the modern Rasina District of Serbia, and flows into the Zapadna Morava near the city of Kruševac. Its historical name is Arsen (Αρσεγα). The Rasina springs from the southern slopes of the Goč mountain, near the village of Rašovka, southwest of the most famous Serbian spa, Vrnjačka Banja. The river originally flows to the southeast, around the mountains of Željin and Kopaonik, next to", "id": "209716" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nLeskovac (Serbian Cyrillic: Лесковац, ) is a city and the administrative center of the Jablanica District in southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the city urban area has 60,288 inhabitants, while the city administrative area has 144,206. Traces of life of the Brnjica culture (8th century BC) is seen at the Hisar Hill (Hisar Leskovac) that was protected by a deep moat with a palisade on its inner side, a fortification similar to that of another fortification on the site near Zlokućane in the Velika Morava basin", "id": "2857693" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nThe favorable location and the richness of nature made Jablanica valley important place since the earliest times. Traffic affordable and fertile, Leskovac valley has provided favorable conditions for the settlement of population. Archaeological findings, of which the most important are Hissar and Caričin grad (Iustiniana Prima) show that life in this area, continuously evolved from prehistoric man to date. First mention of Lebane as Hlebane dates back to 1512. Lebane is formed as a village of the same name after the liberation in 1878. Visiting Serbia in 1880s, M.", "id": "17523930" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nThe South Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Јужна Морава, Serbian Latin: \"Južna Morava\", ; ) is a river in eastern Kosovo and in southern Serbia, which represents the shorter headwater of Great Morava. Today, it is 295 km long, including its source river Binačka Morava. It flows generally in the south to north direction, from Macedonian border to Kosovo and onwards to Central Serbia, where it meets West Morava at Stalać, to create Great Morava. The river rises in the Skopska Crna Gora mountain", "id": "15699471" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\nis the Rzav's longer headstream. It originates from the Čigota mountain, eastern section of the Zlatibor mountain. The river originally flows northward, next to the villages of Vodice and Jokina Ćuprija, reaches the central section of the Zlatibor where it is dammed and creates the artificial Ribnica lake (surface area of 10 km²), after the nearby village of Ribnica. After the lake, the river sharply turns west and soon gets followed by the parallel stream of the \"Jablanica\" river. After crossing the village of Mokra Gora", "id": "11540154" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\n25 km long. Jablanica originates on the eastern slopes of the Jablanik mountain, just few kilometers away from Obnica. It curves around Parač mountain and next to the village of Balinović, before it meets Obnica in Valjevo. Jablanica is 21.5 km long. This is also the beginning of the long region of the Kolubara valley, divided in two large parts, referred to as Upper (\"gornja\") Kolubara and Lower (\"donja\") Kolubara (around the Belgrade's suburb of Obrenovac). At Valjevo, the", "id": "20109583" }, { "contents": "Jablanica District\n\n\nThe Jablanica District (, ) is one of nine administrative districts of Southern and Eastern Serbia. It expands in the south-eastern parts of Serbia. According to the 2011 census results, it has a population of 215,463 inhabitants. The administrative center of the district is the city of Leskovac. The district encompasses the municipalities of: According to the 2011 census results, the Jablanica Distract has a total population of 216,304 inhabitants. Ethnic composition of the Jablanica District: Famous cultural-historic monuments in this District are: the Roman", "id": "13223854" }, { "contents": "Kalna, Crna Trava\n\n\nKalna () is a small village in the Crna Trava municipality of the Jablanica District of Serbia. Kalna village is an old Serbian village, 35 km away from the Crna Trava. It is located between Tumba and Serbian-Bulgarian border, at an altitude of 500 to 1100 m. The total area is rural area of 7285 hectares. The Kalna can be reached from three directions: The road in this way was there since the Turkish rule. It was the shortest connection of Leskovac valley (Dubočica) to Sofia and Constantinople", "id": "11211518" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina-Neretva Canton\n\n\ntook place there during World War II and there is a large museum in Jablanica dedicated to these battles. The Neretva river runs through the cities of Konjic, Jablanica, Mostar and Čapljina before it flows through Croatia and into the Adriatic Sea. There are large lakes in the canton such as the Jablanica lake located around the city Jablanica. The southern most municipality in the canton is the Neum municipality which borders the Adriatic sea and the eastern most municipality is the Ravno municipality along the border with Croatia. Of the ten cantons comprising", "id": "3225485" }, { "contents": "Vardar Corps\n\n\nThe Vardar Corps was a corps of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland (JVuO) that operated on the left bank of the river Vardar during the World War II in Yugoslavia on the territory of modern-day North Macedonia and southern Serbia. Its commander was former Captain of the Royal Guard of the Royal Yugoslav Army Stojan Krstić. It consisted of four brigades with total number of 1,000 soldiers. Together with Jablanica Corps, South Morava Corps and Flying Corps it belonged under \"Mountain Staff 110\" () located in Sijarinska Banja", "id": "11325997" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nthe villages of Mitrovo Polje, Bzenica, Pleš, Jablanica, Grčak, Toskići, Budilovina and Milentija. When the Rasina reaches the small town of Brus, it enters the upper Rasina region and continues next to the villages of Tršanovci, Lepenac and Razbojna. At this point the river reaches the western side of the Veliki Jastrebac mountain, and makes a wide, elbow turn to the north. In this part of the course, the Rasina also makes a southeast border of the Aleksandrovačka Župa region. After the villages of Bogiše", "id": "209717" }, { "contents": "Doljanka\n\n\nDoljanka is a right tributary of Neretva river in North Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The length of Doljanka is around 18 km and reaches an altitude drop of about 400 m. Arises from sources scattered type under the far northeast slopes of Vran mountain on altitude of 1324 m. It runs through limestone canyon, which is high up to 1,200 m and flows through the village of Doljani. Doljanka flows into the Neretva River between Jablanica and Mostar, at an altitude of 300 m. It is also the connection over which trouts from the Neretva", "id": "8874715" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nValley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Albanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje", "id": "17667163" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n. The Neretva then flows northwest, through Konjic. It enters the Jablanica Reservoir (\"Jablaničko jezero\"), one of the largest in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake ends near the town of Jablanica. From here on, the Neretva turns southward, continuing to the Adriatic Sea. With the mountains lining its shores gradually receding, the Neretva enters a valley where the city of Mostar lies. It flows under the old bridge (\"Stari most\") and continues, now wider, toward the town of Čapljina and", "id": "3021139" }, { "contents": "Radan (mountain)\n\n\nRadan (Serbian Cyrillic: Радан) is a mountain in southern Serbia, near the town of Kuršumlija. Its highest peak, Šopot, has an elevation of 1,408 meters above sea level. Radan separates the valleys of the Toplica and Jablanica rivers. It is well covered with deciduous and evergreen forests. The best known spot on Radan is the Devil's Town – a peculiar rock formation consisting of hundreds of mushroom-like posts, located on its southern slopes. Near the Devil's Town there are ruins of Ivanova kula –", "id": "3957176" }, { "contents": "Crni Timok\n\n\nкотлина, \"depression of Crna Reka\"), populated with many smaller villages (Lukovo, Jablanica, Valakonje, Savinac, Gamzigrad, Zvezdan). At Gamzigrad there is also an important archeological site from Roman times. After a flow of 84 km, the Crni Timok reaches Zaječar, where it joins the Beli Timok River, forming the Veliki Timok River. It drains an area of . Early in its course it receives from the right the Radovanska, Suva, Velika, Salešča, Šarbanovačka, Jasenova, Bajnska and Suva", "id": "11459489" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (mountain range)\n\n\nJablanica ( ; ) is a mountain range in Southern and Southeastern Europe, stretching north-south direction across the border of Albania and the Republic of North Macedonia. The long mountain ridge is higher than for approximately , while the highest part, located in its very center, is Black Stone at high. Both countries have 50% of the mountain, Albania the west and North Macedonia the east. Jablanica Mountain contains many large mountain lakes. Shebenik mountain is located just to the west of Jablanica and give name to the Shebenik", "id": "3232652" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nThe Vlasina (Serbian Cyrillic: Власина), is a river in southeastern Serbia, a 70 km-long outflow of the Vlasina Lake and a right tributary to the Južna Morava, which also gives its name to the surrounding Vlasina region. The Vlasina flows out from the Vlasina Lake at an altitude of 1,213 m. Lake used to be a large, muddy peat bog, but in 1947-51 the Vlasina was dammed by the long, earth dam and the bog was turned into an artificial lake. The river flows to", "id": "14981330" }, { "contents": "Desná (Morava)\n\n\nDesná () is a river situated in Olomouc region of Czech republic, left tributary of the Morava. It is 43.4 km long, and its basin area is 338 km. The Desná river originates at the confluence of Hučivá Desná and Divoká Desná in Kouty nad Desnou, the village situated in deep valley of High Ash Mountains. The Desná then goes southwest through a valley toward the town of Šumperk. After approximately 43.4 km, the Desná flows into the Morava river near Postřelmov village.The mean annual discharge at its mouth", "id": "20977814" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nSerbian forces then headed south into the Morava valley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Muslims fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Turks fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Muslims departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessalonika. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in", "id": "1099566" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n, in the center of the region. Other larger towns include Trebinje, Stolac, Široki Brijeg, Posušje, Ljubuški, Grude, Konjic, and Čapljina. Borders between Herzegovina and Bosnia are unclear and often disputed. The upper flow of the Neretva River lies in northern Herzegovina, a heavily forested area with fast-flowing rivers and high mountains. Konjic and Jablanica lie in this area. The Neretva rises on Lebršnik Mountain, close to the Montenegro border, and as the river flows west, it enters Herzegovina. The entire", "id": "3021137" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nUpper Neretva, of the Neretva river from its source at 1,227 m.a.s.l. and headwaters gorge all the way to the town of Konjic is 90 km, flows from south to north - north-west as most of the Bosnia and Herzegovina rivers belonging to the Danube watershed, and cover some 1,390 km with average elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva briefly expanding into a wide valley which provides fertile agricultural land. There exists a large Jablaničko Lake, artificially formed after construction of dam near Jablanica. \"Second", "id": "16797216" }, { "contents": "Kubršnica\n\n\nThe Kubršnica (Serbian Cyrillic: Кубршница) is a river in Šumadija region of central Serbia, a 42 km-long left and the longest tributary to the Jasenica river. The Kubršnica originates from the Venčac mountain, in the Jasenica sub-region of Šumadija, in the wider area of the town of Aranđelovac. The terrain in the source area of the river is rich in marble and fireclay. The river flows to the east, next to the Aranđelovac's suburb of Banja and turns north near Topola. After the villages", "id": "5629731" }, { "contents": "Peć Bistrica\n\n\nkm-long, Rugovo glacier. The gorge is sparsely inhabited (the village of Mali Štupelj). As it comes out of the gorge, the Peć Bistrica reaches the town of Peć and enters the bottom of the Metohija depression through which it flows for the rest of its course. It runs parallel to the flows of the White Drin to the north and the Dečanska Bistrica to the south, next to the villages of Goraždevac, Lješane, Jablanica, Drenovce and Zaimovo, before it empties into the White Drin south of", "id": "15886949" }, { "contents": "Zlatibor\n\n\nsylvestris\" var. \"zlatiborica\" is a subspecies of pine originating from the mountain, and is endangered today. A hill by the name of Cigla\",\" located near the nearby village of Jablanica, still has some borderline markings of the Kingdom of Serbia, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Zlatibor itself is located in the northern part of the Stari Vlah region, a historical border region between Raška, Herzegovina and Bosnia. It spreads over an area of , in length, southeast to northwest, and up", "id": "3906304" }, { "contents": "Serbian Christmas traditions\n\n\nhousehold. The members of the group were called \"koledari\". The \"koleda\" was carried out from the Feast of Saint Ignatius Theophorus (five days before Christmas) up until the Epiphany. This custom was best preserved in the upper Pčinja District, and in the region around the River South Morava in the Jablanica District, southeastern Serbia. Regarded as pagan and discouraged by the Serbian Orthodox Church, the \"koleda\" ceased to be performed among most of the Serbs during the 19th and 20th centuries. \"Koledari\"", "id": "20573743" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwere designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of Medveđa have small numbers of Albanians and their descendants remained. This was due to a local Ottoman Albanian commander Shahid Pasha from the Jablanica area negotiating on good terms with Prince Milan and thereby guaranteeing their presence. Some other Albanians such as merchants attempted to remain in Niš, but they left after murders occurred and their property was sold off at low values. In 1879, some Albanian refugees from", "id": "1099570" }, { "contents": "Kosovo Pomoravlje\n\n\nThe region's largest cities are Gjilan and Bujanovac. The region is known as \"Kosovsko Pomoravlje\" (Косовско Поморавље, \"Morava Valley of Kosovo\") in Serbian and as Lugina e Anamoraves Binçes (\"Valley of Binač Morava\") in Albanian. Its name is derived from the Binač Morava River, which flows through northern Macedonia, eastern Kosovo and southern Serbia as part of the Great Morava river system. The region includes part of the valley and the Karadak and Koznik mountains. Gjilan has six municipalities and 287 smaller", "id": "13339352" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nAlbanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje, with the intention of then turning west and", "id": "17667142" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\nThe Resavčina (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресавчина) is a river in Serbia, a 32 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. It is sometimes also called \"Resavica\" or \"Resava\" (not to be confused with another Velika Morava's right tributary of Resava or its own tributary of Resavica). The Resavčina originates near the village of Proštinac in Svilajnac municipality. The river originally flows to the north, but soon turns west at the village of Dubnica and enters the western half of the Veliko Pomoravlje region", "id": "4886222" }, { "contents": "Ibar (river)\n\n\nThe Ibar, also known as the Ibër and Ibri (, , ), is a river that flows through eastern Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, with a total length of . The river begins in the Hajla mountain, in Rožaje, eastern Montenegro, and passes through Kosovo to flow into the West Morava river near Kraljevo, central Serbia. It belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area is , with an average discharge of 60 m³/s at the mouth. It is not navigable. The Ibar originates from", "id": "4536148" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Ilirska Bistrica\n\n\nJablanica (; ) is a settlement southeast of Ilirska Bistrica in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. Jablanica is the site of three known mass graves or unmarked graves from the end of the Second World War. They all contain the remains of German soldiers from the 97th Corps that were killed at the beginning of May 1945. The Mountain Fields Mass Grave (), also known as the Mountain Mass Grave (), lies in a meadow about 1.6 km northeast of Jablanica and contains the remains of 10 soldiers. The Solne Mass", "id": "16911511" }, { "contents": "Čezsoča\n\n\nČezsoča (; ) is a settlement in the Municipality of Bovec in the Littoral region of Slovenia. It includes the hamlets of Gorenja Vas (), Dolenja Vas (), Jablanica, Kršovec, and Na Glavi. Čezsoča lies in the valley on the left bank of the Soča River. The terrain then rises up towards Mount Polovnik (1,480 m). East of the settlement is Humčič Hill (810 m), behind which rises Mount Javoršček (1,557 m). Oplenk Creek flows through the village between Gorenja Vas and", "id": "14920585" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nJablanica, the Neretva enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching in depth. Three hydroelectric dams operate between Jablanica and Mostar. When the Neretva expands for the second and final time, it reaches its third section. This area is often colloquially called the \"\"Bosnian and Herzegovinian California\"\". The last of its course forms wide alluvial delta, before the river empties into the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Tatinac (also known as the", "id": "12890344" }, { "contents": "Jablaničko lake\n\n\nJablaničko lake () is a large artificially formed lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva briefly expands into a wide valley. River provided lot of fertile, agricultural land there, before lake flooded most of it. The lake was created in 1953 after construction of Jablanica Dam near Jablanica in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake has an irregular elongated shape. Its width varies along its length. The lake is a popular vacation destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Swimming, boating and especially fishing are popular activities", "id": "13828307" }, { "contents": "Jablanica Dam\n\n\nThe Jablanica Dam is an arch-gravity dam on the Neretva River about northeast of Jablanica in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The dam was constructed between 1947 and 1955 with the primary purpose of hydroelectric power production. The power station was commissioned in two stages, from 1955 until 1958. The first generator was commissioned in February 1955. An upgrade in 2008 increased the installed capacity of the power station from 150 MW to 180 MW. The dam's power station is located about to the southeast near Jablanica", "id": "854706" }, { "contents": "Jablanik\n\n\nJablanik (Serbian Cyrillic: Јабланик) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Valjevo. Its highest peak \"Jablanik\" has an elevation of 1,275 meters(10001020_ above sea level. Jablanik is located at the source of the river Jablanica. It is separated from nearby Medvednik mountain by high pass Stolica, while the Debelo Brdo saddle separates it from Povlen in the southeast. The highest peak has the same name as the mountain itself - Jablanik, and is 1,275 m high. The hills around the peak are mainly", "id": "366162" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\nThe Nišava or Nishava (Bulgarian and , ) is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia, a right tributary, and with a length of 218 km also the longest one, of the South Morava. The Nišava originates in western Bulgaria, in the Stara Planina mountains (east of Kom Peak) near the village of Gintsi. Its source is close to the Serbian border. It enters Serbia after 67 km of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries. Because it flows through Gintsi, the upper course of the river is", "id": "9627075" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nAfter Mramorac village, the Jasenica spills over in several parallel flows, which continue until its confluence. After the Pridvorica and Vodice villages (on different arms of the river), the Jasenica reaches the town of Smederevska Palanka, the most populous settlement in its valley. This is also where the Kubršnica, its main tributary, flows into it from the left. The Jasenica then gently bends to the east, flowing into the Great Morava near the village of Veliko Orašje (the southern arm of the river flows through the town", "id": "3481502" }, { "contents": "Gruža (river)\n\n\nThe Gruža (Serbian Cyrillic: Гружа, ) is a river in central Serbia. The river is a 62 km long left tributary to the Zapadna Morava. The Gruža originates in the central part of the Rudnik mountain, right under the mountain's main settlement, the village of Rudnik, northeast of the town of Gornji Milanovac, central Serbia. The river flows south next to the village of Majdan, around the Rudnik mountain into the Takovo region and at the village of Nevade, just few kilometers away from Gornji Milanovac,", "id": "10971320" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\n(hamlet Panjak) on the Serbian-Bosnian border Crni Rzav meets the Jablanica river at the village Gornje Vardište and finally the river Beli Rzav at the village of Donje Vardište. The Rzav continues as the natural extension of the Beli Rzav, but since the Black Rzav is longer, the latter is considered to be the main headstream. It floes between the southernmost part of the Zvijezda mountain (\"Ponos\" peak) from the north and the Suha Gora mountain from the south, next to the villages of Prosjek (and", "id": "11540155" }, { "contents": "Ub (river)\n\n\nThe Ub (Serbian Cyrillic: Уб) is a river in western Serbia, a 57 km-long right and longest tributary to Tamnava river. The Ub originates from the Vlašić mountain in Podgorina region of west Serbia, near the village of Kasapo. From its source to the mouth, the river flows to the east, parallel to the river Tamnava, which it will eventually join. The villages located in the upper section of the river's flow are Družetić, Pambukovica and Čučuge, where the Ub slightly turns to the", "id": "2261401" }, { "contents": "Olomouc Region\n\n\nof the region is situated on the water level of the Morava River near to Kojetín in the Přerov District (190 m above sea level). The Morava river flows through the region and the majority of the region's territory belongs to Morava’s drainage basin. A small northern part of the region belongs to the drainage basin of Odra River, which flows to the Baltic Sea. The Olomouc Region offers a great variety of natural points of interest. Protected landscape area of the Jeseníky mountains offers a number of scenic places such", "id": "11419394" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina\n\n\nJablanica is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is situated on the Neretva river and Jablanica lake. The municipality of Jablanica is a major tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The municipality offer a wide variety of activities. The surrounding mountains such as Plasa, Čvrsnica and Prenj offer both hunting grounds and a variety of hiking trails. One popular hiking destination is \"Hajdučka Vrata\", a natural wonder, the product of wind", "id": "9009264" }, { "contents": "Krupá (Morava)\n\n\nKrupá (German: Graupa Bach) is a creek in Šumperk District, Moravia, left tributary of the Morava. Its length is 19,2 km and its drainage basin covers 112.7 km2. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 4.48 m³/s. The Krupá originates in Czech part of the Śnieżnik Mountains, 400 meters above sea level. The Krupá then goes south toward the town of Staré Město. It flows into the Morava river near Hanušovice town. River keeps its natural character with meanders and original riversides. A river bottom is", "id": "1745557" }, { "contents": "Oskava (river)\n\n\nOskava is a river in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic, left tributary of the Morava river. Its length is 50.3 km and its drainage basin covers 569 km. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 3.53 m/s. The Oskava originates from southeast slope of Kamenná hora in Hrubý Jeseník, 215 meters above sea level. The river is surrounded by woods in upper reaches, flows through hills of Nízký Jeseník in middle reaches and its lower reaches is situated in swampy floodplain of Litovelské Pomoraví Protected Landscape Area.", "id": "8538845" }, { "contents": "Crna Trava\n\n\nCrna Trava ( ) is a village and municipality located in the Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to 2011 census, the population of the village is 434 inhabitants, while population of the municipality is 1,663. This is the smallest by population and poorest municipality in Serbia. Crna Trava is famous for its migrant builders, who are considered the best in the region and are colloquially described as \"building half of Yugoslavia\". The name of the village in Serbian translates to \"Black Grass\". The origin of the name", "id": "18032485" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\n. At the village of Kušiljevo, the river receives the small stream of \"Beljeva\" from the left and turns northward, which is the general direction of its course for the rest of the flow. The river flows parallel to the Velika Morava river as its satellite flow, in the Morava's floodplain, so there are no settlements on the Resavica itself, but several large villages are located in its valley (Porodin, Žabari, Simićevo, Aleksandrovac Požarevački, Vlaški Do, Poljana), all of them located on the", "id": "4886223" }, { "contents": "Lugomir\n\n\nThe Lugomir (Serbian Cyrillic: Лугомир) is a river in central Serbia, a 57 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. The Lugomir originates from two headstreams, the Dulenska reka and the Županjevačka reka. The shorter headstream of Županjevačka reka (Cyrillic: \"Жупањевачка река\") originates from the mountain of Gledićke planine in southern Šumadija region of central Serbia. Its spring is just some 500 m away from the source of Lugomir's another headstream, the Dulenska reka. The river first flows to the east", "id": "5130918" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\ncities in Serbia, 10 km after which the Nišava empties into the Južna Morava. However, with the rapid growth of Niš in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs, the banks of the Nišava are urbanized almost to its mouth. After being divided into districts in 1992, the Nišava District (with Niš as administrative center) is named after the river. The river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area covers 4,086 km, of which about 73% in Serbia, the rest in Bulgaria", "id": "9627077" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nsection\" begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama river between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes a southern course and enter a largest canyons of its course, running through steep slopes of magnificent mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching 800–1200 meters in depth. From here Neretva flows toward the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Jezernica (also Tatinac), the Gornji and Donji Krupac, the Ljuta-Dindolka, the Jesenica, the Bjelimićka Rijeka, the Slatinica, the Račica, the Rakitnica, the Konjička", "id": "16797217" }, { "contents": "Resava (river)\n\n\nThe Resava (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресава) is a river in central Serbia, a 65 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava. It also gives the name to the surrounding Resava region, the Resava Monastery, the coal mines in its valley and a popular tourist destination of Resava Cave. The Resava originates from the Homolje region in eastern Serbia. It springs out at an altitude of 1,100 m and flows westward between the mountains of Beljanica (on the north) and Kučaj (on the south). In its", "id": "15040274" }, { "contents": "A1 motorway (Serbia)\n\n\nJužna Morava river. Southern section (Niš–Leskovac–Vranje–Macedonian border) consists of 128 km that are in service, while additional 26 km are under construction. Construction of southern section has been completed by May 2019, and last sections opened for traffic on 18 May 2019: Highway passes through valley of South Morava, passes west of Niš, by Merošina and Leskovac, and after Grdelica built highway ends. 26 kilometers of highway under construction passes through Grdelica gorge, very difficult terrain. This sections is often considered", "id": "1785427" }, { "contents": "Čivelj\n\n\nČivelj is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in the municipality of Jablanica, Herzegovina-Neretva Canton, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1991, the village had six inhabitants, all of whom were Muslims. In 2013, Čivelj had 10 inhabitants. Tourism is solid. Civelj is placed 8 kilometres from Jablanica and it is placed on Jablanica lake. In lake there are 5 types of fishes including the most popular \"pastrmka\". The village was found in 1911. by local fishermen. Near Civelj", "id": "4645021" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nAlthough these streams are of low outflow, there are also numerous wellsprings rising on both sides of the canyon at the river banks, with high-capacity discharge. Three large hydroelectric power stations operate in this section of the Neretva, between Jablanica and Mostar, namely Grabovica HPP, Salakovac HPP and Mostar HPP. Jablanica lake is a large artificial lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva expands into a wide valley. The river provided fertile, agricultural land before the lake flooded most of it. The lake", "id": "12890353" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nThe Jasenica (Serbian Cyrillic: Јасеница, ) is a river in central Serbia. It is long and is the left tributary of the Great Morava. This river gives the name to the surrounding region. The Jasenica originates from several streams, most notably the Đurinci (Cyrillic: Ђуринци) from Venčac mountain, and the Srebrenica (Cyrillic: Сребреница) from the northern slopes of the Rudnik mountain in central Serbia. At its origin, the river runs through the eastern border of the Kačer region. It flows to the southeast", "id": "3481500" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nin north Skopje, Macedonia. The streams Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is, after passing the Macedonian-Serbian border, known as the Binačka Morava. After 49 km it meets the Preševska Moravica at Bujanovac, and for the remainder, 246 km, flows as the South Morava. The South Morava belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and its own drainage area is 15,696 km², of which 1,237 km² is in Bulgaria (through its right tributary Nišava). Its average", "id": "15699472" }, { "contents": "Pešter\n\n\nRivers Uvac, Vapa, Jablanica and Grabovica flow through the plateau. In the geologic past, the field was a large lake, of which only a small Sjenica lake near the village of Tuzinje remained. The soil is mostly karst interspersed with pastures. Economy of the area relies primarily on cattle breeding, chiefly sheep. Pešter is famous for its dairy products, especially the \"Sjenica cheese\" (\"Sjenički sir\"), as well as lamb and prosciutto. The plateau is sparsely populated: most settlements are on the", "id": "16748290" }, { "contents": "Sredačka župa\n\n\nSredačka Župa (; \"county of Sredska\") is a remote geographical region, a valley, in southeastern Kosovo, below the Šar Mountains at the source of the Prizrenska Bistrica. The region, an oval basin, lies below the Šar Mountains, at the source, upper stream of the Prizrenska Bistrica (\"Prizren river\"). South of the region between the Prizren mountains and Koritnik mountain, lies the Gora region. It currently includes Sredska, Pousko, Jablanica, Lokvica, Rečane, Živinjane, Planjane, Nebregošte,", "id": "13372292" }, { "contents": "Binačka Morava\n\n\nBinačka Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Биначка Морава; ) or (\"Mirusha\") is a river which flows in southeastern Kosovo and North Macedonia. It flows generally in the southwest to northeast direction, from Macedonian border to Bujanovac, where, after 49 km, meets Preševska Moravica, to create South Morava. The river begins in the mountain of Skopska Crna Gora, in North Macedonia, north of its capital Skopje. Streams of Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is,", "id": "12867615" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwar, the Albanian population depending on the area reacted differently to incoming Serbian forces by either offering resistance or fleeing toward nearby mountains and Ottoman Kosovo. Although most of these Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces, a small presence was allowed to remain in the Jablanica valley where their descendants live today. Serbs from Lab moved to Serbia during and after the first round of hostilities in 1876, while incoming Albanian refugees thereafter 1878 repopulated their villages. Albanian refugees also settled alongside the north-eastern Ottoman-Serbian border, in urban areas", "id": "1099553" }, { "contents": "Banjska River\n\n\nThe Banjska River ( / \"Banjska reka\", \"Baths River\"), is a river in southern Serbia, the right tributary of Toplica in which it flows near Kuršumlija. It rises under the far south-eastern branch of Kopaonik. It is 22 km long, with a river basin area of 155 km². The average flow at the mouth is 0,7 m³/s. The valley of the river is mostly ravines, while the basin is rich in forest. The Kuršumlija-Kuršumlijska Banja-Prepolac Pass-Podujevo-", "id": "14979528" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nby a catastrophic flood. Then unregulated river Jablanica, swollen after a long rainy period, broke on June 6, spilled out of its banks and caused enormous material damage Lebane. Flood toll was paid and human victims (killed two people). After this tragic event, with financial help, Lebane begins to industrialize faster, and the process of industrialization has caused more versatile and faster development of the city. According to the 2011 census, the municipality has 22,000 inhabitants. The ethnic composition of the municipality: The following table", "id": "17523935" }, { "contents": "Čvrsnica\n\n\nČvrsnica () is a mountain in the Dinarides of Bosnia and Herzegovina, located in northern Herzegovina, most of the mountain is located in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton municipalities of Mostar and Jablanica while the smaller part of the mountain, around 10% is located in the municipality of Posušje. The highest peak (Pločno) is 2228 metres. Čvrsnica is surrounded by the river Neretva from the east (20 km), its tributaries Doljanka (18 km) from the north and Drežanka (19.8 km) from the south,", "id": "6129606" }, { "contents": "Myjava (river)\n\n\nThe Myjava River is a river in western Slovakia and for a small part in the Czech Republic and left tributary of the Morava River. It rises in the White Carpathians near the village of Nová Lhota in Moravia, but crosses the Czech-Slovak border shortly afterwards and flows in a southern direction until the town of Myjava, where it enters the Myjava Hills and turns west. Near Sobotište it flows into the Záhorie Lowland and turns south until the village of Jablonica, turning northwest and from Senica it flows west, passing through", "id": "2099838" }, { "contents": "West Morava\n\n\nSouth and Great Morava's meridian (south-to-north) flow, the West Morava runs in an opposed, latitudinal (west-to-east) direction, dividing the region of Šumadija of the central Serbia from the southern parts of the country. Due to the West Morava's direction, it flows between many mountains, regions and sub-regions: The West Morava river valley, Zapadno Pomoravlje, is economically the most developed of all three Morava river valleys. With the valley of the Ibar, the West", "id": "7786624" }, { "contents": "Ralja (river)\n\n\nThe Ralja () is a river in Šumadija region of Serbia, a 51 km long left tributary to the Jezava, a tributary of the Great Morava river. It also gives its name to the surrounding Šumadija's subregion of Ralja. The Ralja originates from the northern part of the Kosmaj mountain, north of the village of Velika Ivanča, in the Sopot municipality of the City of Belgrade. Almost from the source, the river valley is a route for the Belgrade-Niš railway. At the villages of Popović and Mali", "id": "2491229" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nBovan gorge carved by the river and is very popular local and regional tourist destination, especially among campers and fishermen, but the coastline is not put in order. The river continues to the south, in an inverse flow, and after the villages of Subotinac and Kraljevo, it empties into the Južna Morava at the town of Aleksinac. The lower section used to be a coal mining area too, just like the upper one, but the mines (Aleksinački Rudnik) are closed now. The Sokobanjska Moravica brlongs to the Black", "id": "1726358" }, { "contents": "Golijska Moravica\n\n\nThe Golijska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Голијска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in western Serbia. With a length of 98 km, it is the longer headstream of the Zapadna Morava (it forms it with the Đetinja), and thus, of the Velika Morava. Its name, Moravica, means \"little Morava\" in Serbian, and it also gives its name to the surrounding region and the modern Moravica District of Serbia. The Golijska Moravica originates from the western slopes of the Golija mountain and flows", "id": "5380325" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\n. The Nišava is not navigable. It is not only the longest tributary of the Južna Morava, but also the largest one in terms of discharge (36 km/s). It has many smaller tributaries, the most important being the Temštica from the right, and the Jerma (or Sukovska reka), Crvena reka, Koritnička reka and Kutinska reka from the left. The Nišava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia: the route follows the valleys of the Morava", "id": "9627078" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nThe Toplica (Serbian Cyrillic: Топлица, ) is a river in southern Serbia. The river is 130 km long and gives its name to the region it flows through, which constitutes most of the modern Toplica District of Serbia. The Toplica originates under the name of \"Duboka\" from the eastern slopes of the Kopaonik mountain, just south of the highest peak, Pančićev vrh. It flows to the southeast, on the western slopes of the Lepa Gora mountain, next to the villages of Merćez, Selova, Žuč,", "id": "19530451" }, { "contents": "Great Morava\n\n\nof the Velika Morava's right tributary Resava). The average discharge of the Velika Morava on its confluence with Danube is 255 m³/s (120 m³/s brought by Zapadna Morava, 100 m³/s by Južna Morava, and 35 m³/s amounted by the Velika Morava itself). Tributaries of the Velika Morava are short, the longest one being the Jasenica (79 km) and others rarely exceeding 50 km. Right tributaries are: Jovanovačka reka, Crnica, Ravanica, Resava and Resavica (or Resavčina). Left tributaries are more numerous,", "id": "2295702" }, { "contents": "Vevčani\n\n\nVevčani () is a village in the Republic of North Macedonia. It is the only settlement and seat of Vevčani Municipality. The village of Vevčani is found in the southwestern range at the foot of the Jablanica mountain range. It is situated from 800 – 950 metres above sea level. The village is located 14 km North-West of the town of Struga. The village is situated near the villages of Oktisi, Velešta, Podgorci, Gorna Belica with the Albanian border to the West of the village. The famous Vevčani", "id": "5042995" } ]
The Jablanica ( Serbian : Јабланица , ) is an river in southern [START_ENT] Serbia [END_ENT] . A left tributary of the South ( or Južna ) Morava river , it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia 's Jablanica District , with the region contributing about one third of the district 's area . The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain , near the village of Grbavce , on the administrative border of the Kosovo province . The area is rich in thermal springs , so several spas are located near the river : Stara Banja , Ravna Banja and Sijarina with popular Sijarinska Banja . At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary Čokotinska reka ( Cyrillic : Чокотинска река ) , turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point . The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the and Radan mountains , in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the in Kosovo . The river flows eastward , passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo , before reaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac , part of the depression of Leskovac , which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava . In the region , near Lebane , a famed archeological find of ( Iustiniana Prima ) is located . The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo , Vranovce , Bošnjace , Turekovac and Stopanje , reaches Vinarce , the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac , and turns north . First it flows parallel to the Veternica river , to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje , then parallel to the Južna Morava . After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava . From Pečenjevce , a parallel flow ( canal ) begins , connecting the Jablanica and s , some 15 km to the north . Through Južna Morava , the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin , draining an area of 895 km ² itself . It 's not navigable and has an average discharge of 6 m ³ / s , which in rainy years grows much higher , so the river floods its valley causing lots of material damage . The name of the river , Jablanica , in Serbian means the
5207b95c-320c-4b2f-a791-347557aa78b9_river:1
[{"answer": "Serbia", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "29265", "title": "Serbia"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nreaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac, part of the depression of Leskovac, which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. In the region, near Lebane, a famed archeological find of Caričin grad (\"Iustiniana Prima\") is located. The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo, Vranovce, Bošnjace, Turekovac and Stopanje, reaches Vinarce, the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac", "id": "3481303" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\n, and turns north. First it flows parallel to the Veternica river, to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje, then parallel to the Južna Morava. After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava. From Pečenjevce, a parallel flow (canal) begins, connecting the Jablanica and Toplica rivers, some 15 km to the north. Through Južna Morava, the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, draining an area of itself. It's not navigable", "id": "3481304" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\npopular Sijarinska Banja. At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary \"Čokotinska reka\" (Cyrillic: \"Чокотинска река\"), turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point. The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the Majdan and Radan mountains, in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the District of Priština in Kosovo. The river flows eastward, passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo, before", "id": "3481302" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nThe Jablanica (, ) is an river in southern Serbia. A left tributary of the South (or Južna) Morava river, it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia's Jablanica District, with the region contributing about one third of the district's area. The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain, near the village of Grbavce, on the border with Kosovo. The area is rich in thermal springs, so several spas are located near the river: Stara Banja, Ravna Banja and Sijarina with", "id": "3481301" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nJablanica with third parallel flow, the \"Sušica\", being formed in between. Settlements include many small villages, like Vina, Bukova Gora, Miroševce, Žabljane, Beli Potok and Strojkovce. In the Leskovac field, the river gently turns north, receives the Sušica from the left and reaches the town of Leskovac. The Veternica continues northward, being connected to the Jablanica river by the canal at the village of Bogojevce, before it empties into the Južna Morava. The Veternica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its", "id": "11539775" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nThe Veternica (Serbian Cyrillic: Ветерница, ) is a river in southern Serbia, a 75 km long left tributary to the Južna Morava, which gives the name to the region surrounding its valley. The Veternica originates from the Grot peak, the southernmost part of the Kukavica mountain. Four smaller streams meet at the village of Vlase and continue to the north as the Veternica. The river flows next to the villages of Golemo Selo, Oštra Glava and Gagince, where it flows parallel to the Jablanica river. As the Veternica", "id": "11539773" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nbends to the northeast, it enters the low Veternica region, part of the Leskovac field in the composite valley of the Južna Morava. Small region, located between the Kukavica mountain on the south and the Jablanica region on the north, is divided in two micro-regions, upper one being centered on the small town of Vučje (which is not located on the river itself) while the center of the lower micro-region is the town of Leskovac. As it enters the region, the Veternica furthers away from the", "id": "11539774" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nthe west, Kukavica and Čemernik in the south and Babička Gora, Seličevica and Suva Planina to the east. The largest river in the region of Leskovac is the South Morava River, which flows south to north. Tributaries of the South Morava are: the Vlasina river, which collects water from Lake Vlasina and flows through Crna Trava and Vlasotince; the Veternica river, which flows through Leskovac; the Jablanica river, which springs from the foot of Goljak and flows through Medveđa and Lebane; the Pusta (Deserted) river,", "id": "2857704" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nof 590 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and is not navigable. The region of Pusta Reka mostly correspondence with the river's watershed. It is located between the Pasjača mountain and lower Toplica region (on the north), the Southern Pomoravlje (Field of Leskovac, on the east), the Jablanica region (on the south) and the Radan mountain (on the west). The region is an agricultural area, almost without any industry, except for some smaller facilities in regional center, Bojnik", "id": "12523581" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nof Podina, Voljčince, Badnjevac and the smaller regional center Žitorađa. After the Toplica reaches municipal center of Doljevac, it enters the most densely populated part of the south Pomoravlje, turns north and flows into the Južna Morava at the village of Orljane, across the medieval ruins of Kurvin grad, as Južna Morava's longest left tributary. The Toplica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its own drainage area of 2,217 km². The river is not navigable. The river valley is a major traffic route in southern Serbia as", "id": "19530454" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nThe Sokobanjska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Сокобањска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in central eastern Serbia, a 58 km-long right tributary to the Južna Morava river. The Sokobanjska Moravica originates from the eastern slopes of the Devica mountain, near the village of Skrobnica. The river flows to the north, turns westward at the village of Levovik and enters the Banja region. The rivers flows between the northern slopes of the Devica and Ozren mountains (on the south) and southern slopes of the Rtanj mountain", "id": "1726356" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\nmouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. As the wider Jabllanica region, Medveđa also had an Albanian majority. These Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces in a way that today would be characterized as ethnic cleansing. Due to depopulation and economic considerations some small numbers of Albanians were allowed to stay and return though not to their previous settlements and instead were designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of", "id": "7117787" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\n, a notable Muslim population existed in the districts of Niš, Pirot, Vranje, Leskovac, Prokuplje and Kuršumlija. The rural parts of Toplica, Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the", "id": "1099558" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nthe southernmost slopes of the Suva Planina and Babička Gora mountains, it reaches the town of Vlasotince and western parts of the low Leskovac field, part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. After the villages of Batulovce and Stajkovce, the Vlasina empties into the Južna Morava, east of the Leskovac's eastern suburb of Mrštane. The Vlasina drains an area of 991 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin and it is not navigable. On 26 June 1988, after a period of heavy rains, Vlasina was a", "id": "14981332" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nThe Pusta River ( / \"Pusta reka\", \"Desolate River\") is a river in southern Serbia, a 71-km long left tributary to the South Morava. It also gives the name to the Pusta Reka region in its valley. The river originates northeast of Prolom Banja, near the Sokolovica village, on the northern tip of the Radan mountain, as the \"Golema River\" (\"Big River\"). It flows eastward, between the mountains of Radan (to the south) and Pasjača (to the", "id": "12523579" }, { "contents": "Persecution of Muslims during Ottoman contraction\n\n\nReka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the Turks were of Albanian origin. The Muslims in the cities of Niš and Pirot were Turkish-speaking; Vranje and Leskovac were Turkish- and Albanian-speaking; Prokuplje", "id": "8891598" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nvalley between Konjic and Jablanica, known simply as \"Neretva\" since Middle Ages, the new point for hydrographical division became dam of the Jablanica HPP where also is a place of confluence of the rivers Neretva and Rama. Here the Neretva river suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before it reach town of Jablanica. From this point it turns again toward south and enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes of the mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica", "id": "12890350" }, { "contents": "Rama (Neretva)\n\n\nRama is a river in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a major tributary of the Neretva. It joins it from the right by discharging into Neretva's artificial reservoir, Jablaničko lake, at place called Marina Pećina, near village of Gračac, between location of underground powerhouse of Rama Hydroelectric Power Station and Jablanica Dam, depending on water level in Jablaničko lake, some 15 kilometers upstream from Jablanica. The Rama flows through municipalities of Prozor-Rama and Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, while its headwaters together with wellsprings in the region of", "id": "3052779" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\nThe Kolubara (Serbian Cyrillic: Колубара, ), is a long river in western Serbia; it is an eastern, right tributary to the Sava river. Kolubara is formed by the two small rivers Obnica and Jablanica. \"Obnica\" is the river in Western Serbia that springs at the foot of the mountain Medvednik. It flows to the East, through the villages of Suvodanje, Bobova, Majinović, Pričević and Zlatarić, and at the city of Valjevo meets the river \"Jablanica\" and forms Kolubara. The Obnica is", "id": "20109582" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\ndating to the 4th century AD lay at various locations of the town, as it was a transitory zone of Upper Moesia; travel and postal stations are among the finds. Toponyms such as \"Arbanaška\" and \"Đjake\" shows an Albanian presence in the Toplica and Southern Morava regions (located north-east of contemporary Kosovo) before the expulsion of Albanians during 1877–1878 period. The rural parts of Jablanica valley and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river", "id": "7117786" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\naverage elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva again expands into a third and largest valley which provided fertile agricultural land before it was flooded by large artificial reservoir, Jablaničko Lake, formed after construction of a Jablanica Dam near town of Jablanica. The second section begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before reaches town of Jablanica, from which point turns again toward south. From", "id": "12890343" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nLebane () is a town and municipality located in Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 10,062 inhabitants, while the municipality has 20,000 inhabitants. The town is located at the confluence of the rivers Jablanica and Šumanska Reka, in the alluvial plain created by the former. Just northeast of the town a larger plain called Leskovačko polje extends toward the town of Leskovac, which is the district seat. The elevation of the town of Lebane is between 275.2 and 420 MASL.", "id": "17523929" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nRakic writes about it as a \"\"big village populated by Serbs, in a valley, on the river Jablanica, on its left bank.\"\" Only when Lebane got the role of Jablanica district headquarters, it began to gradually develop in a direction of a small town. The core of this small town was a series of houses along the Jablanica which is 45m wide here (as is even now); at the end of this series are the buildings of the Court and Municipality. The main feature of", "id": "17523931" }, { "contents": "Štulac (Lebane)\n\n\nthe village of Prekopčelica. The village is located on the valley slopes of the Caričin Potok creek. It is scattered between the altitudes of . It is situated in the wider Pusta Reka region. The village rests on the western slopes of the , which here divides the regions of Pusta Reka and Jablanica. On the west, the easternmost slopes of the Radan mountain begin. The village area covers . The Slavs settled in the area in the 7th century, centering around the ruins of Iustiniana Prima. Due to the lack of", "id": "11151840" }, { "contents": "Grdelica\n\n\nGrdelica () is a town in southern Serbia. It is situated in the Leskovac municipality, in the Jablanica District. The total population of the town was 3,194 people as of the 2011 census. For census purposes, Grdelica is divided into two adjacent parts, southern \"Grdelica town\" (\"Grdelica varoš\"; population 2,136) and northern \"Grdelica village\" (\"Grdelica selo\"; 1,058). Grdelica lies at the South Morava river, on the mountainous terrain at the entrance of the Grdelica Gorge. It", "id": "460756" }, { "contents": "Gornji Bučumet\n\n\nall settlements registered separately in the census. The three settlements lie in the South Morava basin, above the Jablanica river, and as such are located in the Upper Jablanica region. The highest mountain in Upper Bučumet is Paramid (853), with the mountain of Sv. Petar (1149) being located in Middle Bučumet. The three neighbourhoods of Bučumet are 470 to 853 metres above sea level. There is a medieval church built on the ruins of an older church. During the Toplica-Jablanica Operation (, ) in", "id": "12752738" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nthe huge floods of its daughter river. The South Morava has 157 tributaries. The most important left tributaries are: Jablanica, Veternica, Pusta reka and Toplica. Right tributaries are: Vrla, Vlasina, Nišava (the longest) and Sokobanjska Moravica. The South Morava has a significant potential for electricity production, and a huge hydroelectrical system (Vlasina- Vrla I-IV power stations) has been constructed in its drainage basin. To a certain extent, its waters are used for irrigation. The river valley's most important role", "id": "15699476" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nThe Rasina () is a river in south central Serbia. The long river flows through the Rasina region, gives its name to the modern Rasina District of Serbia, and flows into the Zapadna Morava near the city of Kruševac. Its historical name is Arsen (Αρσεγα). The Rasina springs from the southern slopes of the Goč mountain, near the village of Rašovka, southwest of the most famous Serbian spa, Vrnjačka Banja. The river originally flows to the southeast, around the mountains of Željin and Kopaonik, next to", "id": "209716" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nLeskovac (Serbian Cyrillic: Лесковац, ) is a city and the administrative center of the Jablanica District in southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the city urban area has 60,288 inhabitants, while the city administrative area has 144,206. Traces of life of the Brnjica culture (8th century BC) is seen at the Hisar Hill (Hisar Leskovac) that was protected by a deep moat with a palisade on its inner side, a fortification similar to that of another fortification on the site near Zlokućane in the Velika Morava basin", "id": "2857693" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nThe favorable location and the richness of nature made Jablanica valley important place since the earliest times. Traffic affordable and fertile, Leskovac valley has provided favorable conditions for the settlement of population. Archaeological findings, of which the most important are Hissar and Caričin grad (Iustiniana Prima) show that life in this area, continuously evolved from prehistoric man to date. First mention of Lebane as Hlebane dates back to 1512. Lebane is formed as a village of the same name after the liberation in 1878. Visiting Serbia in 1880s, M.", "id": "17523930" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nThe South Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Јужна Морава, Serbian Latin: \"Južna Morava\", ; ) is a river in eastern Kosovo and in southern Serbia, which represents the shorter headwater of Great Morava. Today, it is 295 km long, including its source river Binačka Morava. It flows generally in the south to north direction, from Macedonian border to Kosovo and onwards to Central Serbia, where it meets West Morava at Stalać, to create Great Morava. The river rises in the Skopska Crna Gora mountain", "id": "15699471" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\nis the Rzav's longer headstream. It originates from the Čigota mountain, eastern section of the Zlatibor mountain. The river originally flows northward, next to the villages of Vodice and Jokina Ćuprija, reaches the central section of the Zlatibor where it is dammed and creates the artificial Ribnica lake (surface area of 10 km²), after the nearby village of Ribnica. After the lake, the river sharply turns west and soon gets followed by the parallel stream of the \"Jablanica\" river. After crossing the village of Mokra Gora", "id": "11540154" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\n25 km long. Jablanica originates on the eastern slopes of the Jablanik mountain, just few kilometers away from Obnica. It curves around Parač mountain and next to the village of Balinović, before it meets Obnica in Valjevo. Jablanica is 21.5 km long. This is also the beginning of the long region of the Kolubara valley, divided in two large parts, referred to as Upper (\"gornja\") Kolubara and Lower (\"donja\") Kolubara (around the Belgrade's suburb of Obrenovac). At Valjevo, the", "id": "20109583" }, { "contents": "Jablanica District\n\n\nThe Jablanica District (, ) is one of nine administrative districts of Southern and Eastern Serbia. It expands in the south-eastern parts of Serbia. According to the 2011 census results, it has a population of 215,463 inhabitants. The administrative center of the district is the city of Leskovac. The district encompasses the municipalities of: According to the 2011 census results, the Jablanica Distract has a total population of 216,304 inhabitants. Ethnic composition of the Jablanica District: Famous cultural-historic monuments in this District are: the Roman", "id": "13223854" }, { "contents": "Kalna, Crna Trava\n\n\nKalna () is a small village in the Crna Trava municipality of the Jablanica District of Serbia. Kalna village is an old Serbian village, 35 km away from the Crna Trava. It is located between Tumba and Serbian-Bulgarian border, at an altitude of 500 to 1100 m. The total area is rural area of 7285 hectares. The Kalna can be reached from three directions: The road in this way was there since the Turkish rule. It was the shortest connection of Leskovac valley (Dubočica) to Sofia and Constantinople", "id": "11211518" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina-Neretva Canton\n\n\ntook place there during World War II and there is a large museum in Jablanica dedicated to these battles. The Neretva river runs through the cities of Konjic, Jablanica, Mostar and Čapljina before it flows through Croatia and into the Adriatic Sea. There are large lakes in the canton such as the Jablanica lake located around the city Jablanica. The southern most municipality in the canton is the Neum municipality which borders the Adriatic sea and the eastern most municipality is the Ravno municipality along the border with Croatia. Of the ten cantons comprising", "id": "3225485" }, { "contents": "Vardar Corps\n\n\nThe Vardar Corps was a corps of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland (JVuO) that operated on the left bank of the river Vardar during the World War II in Yugoslavia on the territory of modern-day North Macedonia and southern Serbia. Its commander was former Captain of the Royal Guard of the Royal Yugoslav Army Stojan Krstić. It consisted of four brigades with total number of 1,000 soldiers. Together with Jablanica Corps, South Morava Corps and Flying Corps it belonged under \"Mountain Staff 110\" () located in Sijarinska Banja", "id": "11325997" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nthe villages of Mitrovo Polje, Bzenica, Pleš, Jablanica, Grčak, Toskići, Budilovina and Milentija. When the Rasina reaches the small town of Brus, it enters the upper Rasina region and continues next to the villages of Tršanovci, Lepenac and Razbojna. At this point the river reaches the western side of the Veliki Jastrebac mountain, and makes a wide, elbow turn to the north. In this part of the course, the Rasina also makes a southeast border of the Aleksandrovačka Župa region. After the villages of Bogiše", "id": "209717" }, { "contents": "Doljanka\n\n\nDoljanka is a right tributary of Neretva river in North Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The length of Doljanka is around 18 km and reaches an altitude drop of about 400 m. Arises from sources scattered type under the far northeast slopes of Vran mountain on altitude of 1324 m. It runs through limestone canyon, which is high up to 1,200 m and flows through the village of Doljani. Doljanka flows into the Neretva River between Jablanica and Mostar, at an altitude of 300 m. It is also the connection over which trouts from the Neretva", "id": "8874715" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nValley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Albanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje", "id": "17667163" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n. The Neretva then flows northwest, through Konjic. It enters the Jablanica Reservoir (\"Jablaničko jezero\"), one of the largest in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake ends near the town of Jablanica. From here on, the Neretva turns southward, continuing to the Adriatic Sea. With the mountains lining its shores gradually receding, the Neretva enters a valley where the city of Mostar lies. It flows under the old bridge (\"Stari most\") and continues, now wider, toward the town of Čapljina and", "id": "3021139" }, { "contents": "Radan (mountain)\n\n\nRadan (Serbian Cyrillic: Радан) is a mountain in southern Serbia, near the town of Kuršumlija. Its highest peak, Šopot, has an elevation of 1,408 meters above sea level. Radan separates the valleys of the Toplica and Jablanica rivers. It is well covered with deciduous and evergreen forests. The best known spot on Radan is the Devil's Town – a peculiar rock formation consisting of hundreds of mushroom-like posts, located on its southern slopes. Near the Devil's Town there are ruins of Ivanova kula –", "id": "3957176" }, { "contents": "Crni Timok\n\n\nкотлина, \"depression of Crna Reka\"), populated with many smaller villages (Lukovo, Jablanica, Valakonje, Savinac, Gamzigrad, Zvezdan). At Gamzigrad there is also an important archeological site from Roman times. After a flow of 84 km, the Crni Timok reaches Zaječar, where it joins the Beli Timok River, forming the Veliki Timok River. It drains an area of . Early in its course it receives from the right the Radovanska, Suva, Velika, Salešča, Šarbanovačka, Jasenova, Bajnska and Suva", "id": "11459489" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (mountain range)\n\n\nJablanica ( ; ) is a mountain range in Southern and Southeastern Europe, stretching north-south direction across the border of Albania and the Republic of North Macedonia. The long mountain ridge is higher than for approximately , while the highest part, located in its very center, is Black Stone at high. Both countries have 50% of the mountain, Albania the west and North Macedonia the east. Jablanica Mountain contains many large mountain lakes. Shebenik mountain is located just to the west of Jablanica and give name to the Shebenik", "id": "3232652" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nThe Vlasina (Serbian Cyrillic: Власина), is a river in southeastern Serbia, a 70 km-long outflow of the Vlasina Lake and a right tributary to the Južna Morava, which also gives its name to the surrounding Vlasina region. The Vlasina flows out from the Vlasina Lake at an altitude of 1,213 m. Lake used to be a large, muddy peat bog, but in 1947-51 the Vlasina was dammed by the long, earth dam and the bog was turned into an artificial lake. The river flows to", "id": "14981330" }, { "contents": "Desná (Morava)\n\n\nDesná () is a river situated in Olomouc region of Czech republic, left tributary of the Morava. It is 43.4 km long, and its basin area is 338 km. The Desná river originates at the confluence of Hučivá Desná and Divoká Desná in Kouty nad Desnou, the village situated in deep valley of High Ash Mountains. The Desná then goes southwest through a valley toward the town of Šumperk. After approximately 43.4 km, the Desná flows into the Morava river near Postřelmov village.The mean annual discharge at its mouth", "id": "20977814" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nSerbian forces then headed south into the Morava valley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Muslims fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Turks fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Muslims departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessalonika. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in", "id": "1099566" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n, in the center of the region. Other larger towns include Trebinje, Stolac, Široki Brijeg, Posušje, Ljubuški, Grude, Konjic, and Čapljina. Borders between Herzegovina and Bosnia are unclear and often disputed. The upper flow of the Neretva River lies in northern Herzegovina, a heavily forested area with fast-flowing rivers and high mountains. Konjic and Jablanica lie in this area. The Neretva rises on Lebršnik Mountain, close to the Montenegro border, and as the river flows west, it enters Herzegovina. The entire", "id": "3021137" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nUpper Neretva, of the Neretva river from its source at 1,227 m.a.s.l. and headwaters gorge all the way to the town of Konjic is 90 km, flows from south to north - north-west as most of the Bosnia and Herzegovina rivers belonging to the Danube watershed, and cover some 1,390 km with average elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva briefly expanding into a wide valley which provides fertile agricultural land. There exists a large Jablaničko Lake, artificially formed after construction of dam near Jablanica. \"Second", "id": "16797216" }, { "contents": "Kubršnica\n\n\nThe Kubršnica (Serbian Cyrillic: Кубршница) is a river in Šumadija region of central Serbia, a 42 km-long left and the longest tributary to the Jasenica river. The Kubršnica originates from the Venčac mountain, in the Jasenica sub-region of Šumadija, in the wider area of the town of Aranđelovac. The terrain in the source area of the river is rich in marble and fireclay. The river flows to the east, next to the Aranđelovac's suburb of Banja and turns north near Topola. After the villages", "id": "5629731" }, { "contents": "Peć Bistrica\n\n\nkm-long, Rugovo glacier. The gorge is sparsely inhabited (the village of Mali Štupelj). As it comes out of the gorge, the Peć Bistrica reaches the town of Peć and enters the bottom of the Metohija depression through which it flows for the rest of its course. It runs parallel to the flows of the White Drin to the north and the Dečanska Bistrica to the south, next to the villages of Goraždevac, Lješane, Jablanica, Drenovce and Zaimovo, before it empties into the White Drin south of", "id": "15886949" }, { "contents": "Zlatibor\n\n\nsylvestris\" var. \"zlatiborica\" is a subspecies of pine originating from the mountain, and is endangered today. A hill by the name of Cigla\",\" located near the nearby village of Jablanica, still has some borderline markings of the Kingdom of Serbia, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Zlatibor itself is located in the northern part of the Stari Vlah region, a historical border region between Raška, Herzegovina and Bosnia. It spreads over an area of , in length, southeast to northwest, and up", "id": "3906304" }, { "contents": "Serbian Christmas traditions\n\n\nhousehold. The members of the group were called \"koledari\". The \"koleda\" was carried out from the Feast of Saint Ignatius Theophorus (five days before Christmas) up until the Epiphany. This custom was best preserved in the upper Pčinja District, and in the region around the River South Morava in the Jablanica District, southeastern Serbia. Regarded as pagan and discouraged by the Serbian Orthodox Church, the \"koleda\" ceased to be performed among most of the Serbs during the 19th and 20th centuries. \"Koledari\"", "id": "20573743" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwere designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of Medveđa have small numbers of Albanians and their descendants remained. This was due to a local Ottoman Albanian commander Shahid Pasha from the Jablanica area negotiating on good terms with Prince Milan and thereby guaranteeing their presence. Some other Albanians such as merchants attempted to remain in Niš, but they left after murders occurred and their property was sold off at low values. In 1879, some Albanian refugees from", "id": "1099570" }, { "contents": "Kosovo Pomoravlje\n\n\nThe region's largest cities are Gjilan and Bujanovac. The region is known as \"Kosovsko Pomoravlje\" (Косовско Поморавље, \"Morava Valley of Kosovo\") in Serbian and as Lugina e Anamoraves Binçes (\"Valley of Binač Morava\") in Albanian. Its name is derived from the Binač Morava River, which flows through northern Macedonia, eastern Kosovo and southern Serbia as part of the Great Morava river system. The region includes part of the valley and the Karadak and Koznik mountains. Gjilan has six municipalities and 287 smaller", "id": "13339352" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nAlbanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje, with the intention of then turning west and", "id": "17667142" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\nThe Resavčina (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресавчина) is a river in Serbia, a 32 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. It is sometimes also called \"Resavica\" or \"Resava\" (not to be confused with another Velika Morava's right tributary of Resava or its own tributary of Resavica). The Resavčina originates near the village of Proštinac in Svilajnac municipality. The river originally flows to the north, but soon turns west at the village of Dubnica and enters the western half of the Veliko Pomoravlje region", "id": "4886222" }, { "contents": "Ibar (river)\n\n\nThe Ibar, also known as the Ibër and Ibri (, , ), is a river that flows through eastern Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, with a total length of . The river begins in the Hajla mountain, in Rožaje, eastern Montenegro, and passes through Kosovo to flow into the West Morava river near Kraljevo, central Serbia. It belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area is , with an average discharge of 60 m³/s at the mouth. It is not navigable. The Ibar originates from", "id": "4536148" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Ilirska Bistrica\n\n\nJablanica (; ) is a settlement southeast of Ilirska Bistrica in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. Jablanica is the site of three known mass graves or unmarked graves from the end of the Second World War. They all contain the remains of German soldiers from the 97th Corps that were killed at the beginning of May 1945. The Mountain Fields Mass Grave (), also known as the Mountain Mass Grave (), lies in a meadow about 1.6 km northeast of Jablanica and contains the remains of 10 soldiers. The Solne Mass", "id": "16911511" }, { "contents": "Čezsoča\n\n\nČezsoča (; ) is a settlement in the Municipality of Bovec in the Littoral region of Slovenia. It includes the hamlets of Gorenja Vas (), Dolenja Vas (), Jablanica, Kršovec, and Na Glavi. Čezsoča lies in the valley on the left bank of the Soča River. The terrain then rises up towards Mount Polovnik (1,480 m). East of the settlement is Humčič Hill (810 m), behind which rises Mount Javoršček (1,557 m). Oplenk Creek flows through the village between Gorenja Vas and", "id": "14920585" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nJablanica, the Neretva enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching in depth. Three hydroelectric dams operate between Jablanica and Mostar. When the Neretva expands for the second and final time, it reaches its third section. This area is often colloquially called the \"\"Bosnian and Herzegovinian California\"\". The last of its course forms wide alluvial delta, before the river empties into the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Tatinac (also known as the", "id": "12890344" }, { "contents": "Jablaničko lake\n\n\nJablaničko lake () is a large artificially formed lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva briefly expands into a wide valley. River provided lot of fertile, agricultural land there, before lake flooded most of it. The lake was created in 1953 after construction of Jablanica Dam near Jablanica in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake has an irregular elongated shape. Its width varies along its length. The lake is a popular vacation destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Swimming, boating and especially fishing are popular activities", "id": "13828307" }, { "contents": "Jablanica Dam\n\n\nThe Jablanica Dam is an arch-gravity dam on the Neretva River about northeast of Jablanica in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The dam was constructed between 1947 and 1955 with the primary purpose of hydroelectric power production. The power station was commissioned in two stages, from 1955 until 1958. The first generator was commissioned in February 1955. An upgrade in 2008 increased the installed capacity of the power station from 150 MW to 180 MW. The dam's power station is located about to the southeast near Jablanica", "id": "854706" }, { "contents": "Jablanik\n\n\nJablanik (Serbian Cyrillic: Јабланик) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Valjevo. Its highest peak \"Jablanik\" has an elevation of 1,275 meters(10001020_ above sea level. Jablanik is located at the source of the river Jablanica. It is separated from nearby Medvednik mountain by high pass Stolica, while the Debelo Brdo saddle separates it from Povlen in the southeast. The highest peak has the same name as the mountain itself - Jablanik, and is 1,275 m high. The hills around the peak are mainly", "id": "366162" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\nThe Nišava or Nishava (Bulgarian and , ) is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia, a right tributary, and with a length of 218 km also the longest one, of the South Morava. The Nišava originates in western Bulgaria, in the Stara Planina mountains (east of Kom Peak) near the village of Gintsi. Its source is close to the Serbian border. It enters Serbia after 67 km of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries. Because it flows through Gintsi, the upper course of the river is", "id": "9627075" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nAfter Mramorac village, the Jasenica spills over in several parallel flows, which continue until its confluence. After the Pridvorica and Vodice villages (on different arms of the river), the Jasenica reaches the town of Smederevska Palanka, the most populous settlement in its valley. This is also where the Kubršnica, its main tributary, flows into it from the left. The Jasenica then gently bends to the east, flowing into the Great Morava near the village of Veliko Orašje (the southern arm of the river flows through the town", "id": "3481502" }, { "contents": "Gruža (river)\n\n\nThe Gruža (Serbian Cyrillic: Гружа, ) is a river in central Serbia. The river is a 62 km long left tributary to the Zapadna Morava. The Gruža originates in the central part of the Rudnik mountain, right under the mountain's main settlement, the village of Rudnik, northeast of the town of Gornji Milanovac, central Serbia. The river flows south next to the village of Majdan, around the Rudnik mountain into the Takovo region and at the village of Nevade, just few kilometers away from Gornji Milanovac,", "id": "10971320" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\n(hamlet Panjak) on the Serbian-Bosnian border Crni Rzav meets the Jablanica river at the village Gornje Vardište and finally the river Beli Rzav at the village of Donje Vardište. The Rzav continues as the natural extension of the Beli Rzav, but since the Black Rzav is longer, the latter is considered to be the main headstream. It floes between the southernmost part of the Zvijezda mountain (\"Ponos\" peak) from the north and the Suha Gora mountain from the south, next to the villages of Prosjek (and", "id": "11540155" }, { "contents": "Ub (river)\n\n\nThe Ub (Serbian Cyrillic: Уб) is a river in western Serbia, a 57 km-long right and longest tributary to Tamnava river. The Ub originates from the Vlašić mountain in Podgorina region of west Serbia, near the village of Kasapo. From its source to the mouth, the river flows to the east, parallel to the river Tamnava, which it will eventually join. The villages located in the upper section of the river's flow are Družetić, Pambukovica and Čučuge, where the Ub slightly turns to the", "id": "2261401" }, { "contents": "Olomouc Region\n\n\nof the region is situated on the water level of the Morava River near to Kojetín in the Přerov District (190 m above sea level). The Morava river flows through the region and the majority of the region's territory belongs to Morava’s drainage basin. A small northern part of the region belongs to the drainage basin of Odra River, which flows to the Baltic Sea. The Olomouc Region offers a great variety of natural points of interest. Protected landscape area of the Jeseníky mountains offers a number of scenic places such", "id": "11419394" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina\n\n\nJablanica is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is situated on the Neretva river and Jablanica lake. The municipality of Jablanica is a major tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The municipality offer a wide variety of activities. The surrounding mountains such as Plasa, Čvrsnica and Prenj offer both hunting grounds and a variety of hiking trails. One popular hiking destination is \"Hajdučka Vrata\", a natural wonder, the product of wind", "id": "9009264" }, { "contents": "Krupá (Morava)\n\n\nKrupá (German: Graupa Bach) is a creek in Šumperk District, Moravia, left tributary of the Morava. Its length is 19,2 km and its drainage basin covers 112.7 km2. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 4.48 m³/s. The Krupá originates in Czech part of the Śnieżnik Mountains, 400 meters above sea level. The Krupá then goes south toward the town of Staré Město. It flows into the Morava river near Hanušovice town. River keeps its natural character with meanders and original riversides. A river bottom is", "id": "1745557" }, { "contents": "Oskava (river)\n\n\nOskava is a river in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic, left tributary of the Morava river. Its length is 50.3 km and its drainage basin covers 569 km. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 3.53 m/s. The Oskava originates from southeast slope of Kamenná hora in Hrubý Jeseník, 215 meters above sea level. The river is surrounded by woods in upper reaches, flows through hills of Nízký Jeseník in middle reaches and its lower reaches is situated in swampy floodplain of Litovelské Pomoraví Protected Landscape Area.", "id": "8538845" }, { "contents": "Crna Trava\n\n\nCrna Trava ( ) is a village and municipality located in the Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to 2011 census, the population of the village is 434 inhabitants, while population of the municipality is 1,663. This is the smallest by population and poorest municipality in Serbia. Crna Trava is famous for its migrant builders, who are considered the best in the region and are colloquially described as \"building half of Yugoslavia\". The name of the village in Serbian translates to \"Black Grass\". The origin of the name", "id": "18032485" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\n. At the village of Kušiljevo, the river receives the small stream of \"Beljeva\" from the left and turns northward, which is the general direction of its course for the rest of the flow. The river flows parallel to the Velika Morava river as its satellite flow, in the Morava's floodplain, so there are no settlements on the Resavica itself, but several large villages are located in its valley (Porodin, Žabari, Simićevo, Aleksandrovac Požarevački, Vlaški Do, Poljana), all of them located on the", "id": "4886223" }, { "contents": "Lugomir\n\n\nThe Lugomir (Serbian Cyrillic: Лугомир) is a river in central Serbia, a 57 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. The Lugomir originates from two headstreams, the Dulenska reka and the Županjevačka reka. The shorter headstream of Županjevačka reka (Cyrillic: \"Жупањевачка река\") originates from the mountain of Gledićke planine in southern Šumadija region of central Serbia. Its spring is just some 500 m away from the source of Lugomir's another headstream, the Dulenska reka. The river first flows to the east", "id": "5130918" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\ncities in Serbia, 10 km after which the Nišava empties into the Južna Morava. However, with the rapid growth of Niš in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs, the banks of the Nišava are urbanized almost to its mouth. After being divided into districts in 1992, the Nišava District (with Niš as administrative center) is named after the river. The river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area covers 4,086 km, of which about 73% in Serbia, the rest in Bulgaria", "id": "9627077" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nsection\" begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama river between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes a southern course and enter a largest canyons of its course, running through steep slopes of magnificent mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching 800–1200 meters in depth. From here Neretva flows toward the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Jezernica (also Tatinac), the Gornji and Donji Krupac, the Ljuta-Dindolka, the Jesenica, the Bjelimićka Rijeka, the Slatinica, the Račica, the Rakitnica, the Konjička", "id": "16797217" }, { "contents": "Resava (river)\n\n\nThe Resava (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресава) is a river in central Serbia, a 65 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava. It also gives the name to the surrounding Resava region, the Resava Monastery, the coal mines in its valley and a popular tourist destination of Resava Cave. The Resava originates from the Homolje region in eastern Serbia. It springs out at an altitude of 1,100 m and flows westward between the mountains of Beljanica (on the north) and Kučaj (on the south). In its", "id": "15040274" }, { "contents": "A1 motorway (Serbia)\n\n\nJužna Morava river. Southern section (Niš–Leskovac–Vranje–Macedonian border) consists of 128 km that are in service, while additional 26 km are under construction. Construction of southern section has been completed by May 2019, and last sections opened for traffic on 18 May 2019: Highway passes through valley of South Morava, passes west of Niš, by Merošina and Leskovac, and after Grdelica built highway ends. 26 kilometers of highway under construction passes through Grdelica gorge, very difficult terrain. This sections is often considered", "id": "1785427" }, { "contents": "Čivelj\n\n\nČivelj is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in the municipality of Jablanica, Herzegovina-Neretva Canton, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1991, the village had six inhabitants, all of whom were Muslims. In 2013, Čivelj had 10 inhabitants. Tourism is solid. Civelj is placed 8 kilometres from Jablanica and it is placed on Jablanica lake. In lake there are 5 types of fishes including the most popular \"pastrmka\". The village was found in 1911. by local fishermen. Near Civelj", "id": "4645021" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nAlthough these streams are of low outflow, there are also numerous wellsprings rising on both sides of the canyon at the river banks, with high-capacity discharge. Three large hydroelectric power stations operate in this section of the Neretva, between Jablanica and Mostar, namely Grabovica HPP, Salakovac HPP and Mostar HPP. Jablanica lake is a large artificial lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva expands into a wide valley. The river provided fertile, agricultural land before the lake flooded most of it. The lake", "id": "12890353" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nThe Jasenica (Serbian Cyrillic: Јасеница, ) is a river in central Serbia. It is long and is the left tributary of the Great Morava. This river gives the name to the surrounding region. The Jasenica originates from several streams, most notably the Đurinci (Cyrillic: Ђуринци) from Venčac mountain, and the Srebrenica (Cyrillic: Сребреница) from the northern slopes of the Rudnik mountain in central Serbia. At its origin, the river runs through the eastern border of the Kačer region. It flows to the southeast", "id": "3481500" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nin north Skopje, Macedonia. The streams Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is, after passing the Macedonian-Serbian border, known as the Binačka Morava. After 49 km it meets the Preševska Moravica at Bujanovac, and for the remainder, 246 km, flows as the South Morava. The South Morava belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and its own drainage area is 15,696 km², of which 1,237 km² is in Bulgaria (through its right tributary Nišava). Its average", "id": "15699472" }, { "contents": "Pešter\n\n\nRivers Uvac, Vapa, Jablanica and Grabovica flow through the plateau. In the geologic past, the field was a large lake, of which only a small Sjenica lake near the village of Tuzinje remained. The soil is mostly karst interspersed with pastures. Economy of the area relies primarily on cattle breeding, chiefly sheep. Pešter is famous for its dairy products, especially the \"Sjenica cheese\" (\"Sjenički sir\"), as well as lamb and prosciutto. The plateau is sparsely populated: most settlements are on the", "id": "16748290" }, { "contents": "Sredačka župa\n\n\nSredačka Župa (; \"county of Sredska\") is a remote geographical region, a valley, in southeastern Kosovo, below the Šar Mountains at the source of the Prizrenska Bistrica. The region, an oval basin, lies below the Šar Mountains, at the source, upper stream of the Prizrenska Bistrica (\"Prizren river\"). South of the region between the Prizren mountains and Koritnik mountain, lies the Gora region. It currently includes Sredska, Pousko, Jablanica, Lokvica, Rečane, Živinjane, Planjane, Nebregošte,", "id": "13372292" }, { "contents": "Binačka Morava\n\n\nBinačka Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Биначка Морава; ) or (\"Mirusha\") is a river which flows in southeastern Kosovo and North Macedonia. It flows generally in the southwest to northeast direction, from Macedonian border to Bujanovac, where, after 49 km, meets Preševska Moravica, to create South Morava. The river begins in the mountain of Skopska Crna Gora, in North Macedonia, north of its capital Skopje. Streams of Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is,", "id": "12867615" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwar, the Albanian population depending on the area reacted differently to incoming Serbian forces by either offering resistance or fleeing toward nearby mountains and Ottoman Kosovo. Although most of these Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces, a small presence was allowed to remain in the Jablanica valley where their descendants live today. Serbs from Lab moved to Serbia during and after the first round of hostilities in 1876, while incoming Albanian refugees thereafter 1878 repopulated their villages. Albanian refugees also settled alongside the north-eastern Ottoman-Serbian border, in urban areas", "id": "1099553" }, { "contents": "Banjska River\n\n\nThe Banjska River ( / \"Banjska reka\", \"Baths River\"), is a river in southern Serbia, the right tributary of Toplica in which it flows near Kuršumlija. It rises under the far south-eastern branch of Kopaonik. It is 22 km long, with a river basin area of 155 km². The average flow at the mouth is 0,7 m³/s. The valley of the river is mostly ravines, while the basin is rich in forest. The Kuršumlija-Kuršumlijska Banja-Prepolac Pass-Podujevo-", "id": "14979528" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nby a catastrophic flood. Then unregulated river Jablanica, swollen after a long rainy period, broke on June 6, spilled out of its banks and caused enormous material damage Lebane. Flood toll was paid and human victims (killed two people). After this tragic event, with financial help, Lebane begins to industrialize faster, and the process of industrialization has caused more versatile and faster development of the city. According to the 2011 census, the municipality has 22,000 inhabitants. The ethnic composition of the municipality: The following table", "id": "17523935" }, { "contents": "Čvrsnica\n\n\nČvrsnica () is a mountain in the Dinarides of Bosnia and Herzegovina, located in northern Herzegovina, most of the mountain is located in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton municipalities of Mostar and Jablanica while the smaller part of the mountain, around 10% is located in the municipality of Posušje. The highest peak (Pločno) is 2228 metres. Čvrsnica is surrounded by the river Neretva from the east (20 km), its tributaries Doljanka (18 km) from the north and Drežanka (19.8 km) from the south,", "id": "6129606" }, { "contents": "Myjava (river)\n\n\nThe Myjava River is a river in western Slovakia and for a small part in the Czech Republic and left tributary of the Morava River. It rises in the White Carpathians near the village of Nová Lhota in Moravia, but crosses the Czech-Slovak border shortly afterwards and flows in a southern direction until the town of Myjava, where it enters the Myjava Hills and turns west. Near Sobotište it flows into the Záhorie Lowland and turns south until the village of Jablonica, turning northwest and from Senica it flows west, passing through", "id": "2099838" }, { "contents": "West Morava\n\n\nSouth and Great Morava's meridian (south-to-north) flow, the West Morava runs in an opposed, latitudinal (west-to-east) direction, dividing the region of Šumadija of the central Serbia from the southern parts of the country. Due to the West Morava's direction, it flows between many mountains, regions and sub-regions: The West Morava river valley, Zapadno Pomoravlje, is economically the most developed of all three Morava river valleys. With the valley of the Ibar, the West", "id": "7786624" }, { "contents": "Ralja (river)\n\n\nThe Ralja () is a river in Šumadija region of Serbia, a 51 km long left tributary to the Jezava, a tributary of the Great Morava river. It also gives its name to the surrounding Šumadija's subregion of Ralja. The Ralja originates from the northern part of the Kosmaj mountain, north of the village of Velika Ivanča, in the Sopot municipality of the City of Belgrade. Almost from the source, the river valley is a route for the Belgrade-Niš railway. At the villages of Popović and Mali", "id": "2491229" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nBovan gorge carved by the river and is very popular local and regional tourist destination, especially among campers and fishermen, but the coastline is not put in order. The river continues to the south, in an inverse flow, and after the villages of Subotinac and Kraljevo, it empties into the Južna Morava at the town of Aleksinac. The lower section used to be a coal mining area too, just like the upper one, but the mines (Aleksinački Rudnik) are closed now. The Sokobanjska Moravica brlongs to the Black", "id": "1726358" }, { "contents": "Golijska Moravica\n\n\nThe Golijska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Голијска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in western Serbia. With a length of 98 km, it is the longer headstream of the Zapadna Morava (it forms it with the Đetinja), and thus, of the Velika Morava. Its name, Moravica, means \"little Morava\" in Serbian, and it also gives its name to the surrounding region and the modern Moravica District of Serbia. The Golijska Moravica originates from the western slopes of the Golija mountain and flows", "id": "5380325" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\n. The Nišava is not navigable. It is not only the longest tributary of the Južna Morava, but also the largest one in terms of discharge (36 km/s). It has many smaller tributaries, the most important being the Temštica from the right, and the Jerma (or Sukovska reka), Crvena reka, Koritnička reka and Kutinska reka from the left. The Nišava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia: the route follows the valleys of the Morava", "id": "9627078" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nThe Toplica (Serbian Cyrillic: Топлица, ) is a river in southern Serbia. The river is 130 km long and gives its name to the region it flows through, which constitutes most of the modern Toplica District of Serbia. The Toplica originates under the name of \"Duboka\" from the eastern slopes of the Kopaonik mountain, just south of the highest peak, Pančićev vrh. It flows to the southeast, on the western slopes of the Lepa Gora mountain, next to the villages of Merćez, Selova, Žuč,", "id": "19530451" }, { "contents": "Great Morava\n\n\nof the Velika Morava's right tributary Resava). The average discharge of the Velika Morava on its confluence with Danube is 255 m³/s (120 m³/s brought by Zapadna Morava, 100 m³/s by Južna Morava, and 35 m³/s amounted by the Velika Morava itself). Tributaries of the Velika Morava are short, the longest one being the Jasenica (79 km) and others rarely exceeding 50 km. Right tributaries are: Jovanovačka reka, Crnica, Ravanica, Resava and Resavica (or Resavčina). Left tributaries are more numerous,", "id": "2295702" }, { "contents": "Vevčani\n\n\nVevčani () is a village in the Republic of North Macedonia. It is the only settlement and seat of Vevčani Municipality. The village of Vevčani is found in the southwestern range at the foot of the Jablanica mountain range. It is situated from 800 – 950 metres above sea level. The village is located 14 km North-West of the town of Struga. The village is situated near the villages of Oktisi, Velešta, Podgorci, Gorna Belica with the Albanian border to the West of the village. The famous Vevčani", "id": "5042995" } ]
The Jablanica ( Serbian : Јабланица , ) is an river in southern Serbia . A left tributary of the [START_ENT] South ( or Južna ) Morava [END_ENT] river , it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia 's Jablanica District , with the region contributing about one third of the district 's area . The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain , near the village of Grbavce , on the administrative border of the Kosovo province . The area is rich in thermal springs , so several spas are located near the river : Stara Banja , Ravna Banja and Sijarina with popular Sijarinska Banja . At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary Čokotinska reka ( Cyrillic : Чокотинска река ) , turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point . The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the and Radan mountains , in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the in Kosovo . The river flows eastward , passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo , before reaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac , part of the depression of Leskovac , which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava . In the region , near Lebane , a famed archeological find of ( Iustiniana Prima ) is located . The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo , Vranovce , Bošnjace , Turekovac and Stopanje , reaches Vinarce , the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac , and turns north . First it flows parallel to the Veternica river , to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje , then parallel to the Južna Morava . After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava . From Pečenjevce , a parallel flow ( canal ) begins , connecting the Jablanica and s , some 15 km to the north . Through Južna Morava , the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin , draining an area of 895 km ² itself . It 's not navigable and has an average discharge of 6 m ³ / s , which in rainy years grows much higher , so the river floods its valley causing lots of material damage . The name of the river , Jablanica , in Serbian means the
3b3fb680-df57-4a8f-8c00-acb41e3175b1_river:2
[{"answer": "South Morava", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "4956000", "title": "South Morava"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nreaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac, part of the depression of Leskovac, which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. In the region, near Lebane, a famed archeological find of Caričin grad (\"Iustiniana Prima\") is located. The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo, Vranovce, Bošnjace, Turekovac and Stopanje, reaches Vinarce, the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac", "id": "3481303" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\n, and turns north. First it flows parallel to the Veternica river, to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje, then parallel to the Južna Morava. After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava. From Pečenjevce, a parallel flow (canal) begins, connecting the Jablanica and Toplica rivers, some 15 km to the north. Through Južna Morava, the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, draining an area of itself. It's not navigable", "id": "3481304" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\npopular Sijarinska Banja. At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary \"Čokotinska reka\" (Cyrillic: \"Чокотинска река\"), turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point. The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the Majdan and Radan mountains, in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the District of Priština in Kosovo. The river flows eastward, passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo, before", "id": "3481302" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nThe Jablanica (, ) is an river in southern Serbia. A left tributary of the South (or Južna) Morava river, it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia's Jablanica District, with the region contributing about one third of the district's area. The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain, near the village of Grbavce, on the border with Kosovo. The area is rich in thermal springs, so several spas are located near the river: Stara Banja, Ravna Banja and Sijarina with", "id": "3481301" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nJablanica with third parallel flow, the \"Sušica\", being formed in between. Settlements include many small villages, like Vina, Bukova Gora, Miroševce, Žabljane, Beli Potok and Strojkovce. In the Leskovac field, the river gently turns north, receives the Sušica from the left and reaches the town of Leskovac. The Veternica continues northward, being connected to the Jablanica river by the canal at the village of Bogojevce, before it empties into the Južna Morava. The Veternica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its", "id": "11539775" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nThe Veternica (Serbian Cyrillic: Ветерница, ) is a river in southern Serbia, a 75 km long left tributary to the Južna Morava, which gives the name to the region surrounding its valley. The Veternica originates from the Grot peak, the southernmost part of the Kukavica mountain. Four smaller streams meet at the village of Vlase and continue to the north as the Veternica. The river flows next to the villages of Golemo Selo, Oštra Glava and Gagince, where it flows parallel to the Jablanica river. As the Veternica", "id": "11539773" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nbends to the northeast, it enters the low Veternica region, part of the Leskovac field in the composite valley of the Južna Morava. Small region, located between the Kukavica mountain on the south and the Jablanica region on the north, is divided in two micro-regions, upper one being centered on the small town of Vučje (which is not located on the river itself) while the center of the lower micro-region is the town of Leskovac. As it enters the region, the Veternica furthers away from the", "id": "11539774" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nthe west, Kukavica and Čemernik in the south and Babička Gora, Seličevica and Suva Planina to the east. The largest river in the region of Leskovac is the South Morava River, which flows south to north. Tributaries of the South Morava are: the Vlasina river, which collects water from Lake Vlasina and flows through Crna Trava and Vlasotince; the Veternica river, which flows through Leskovac; the Jablanica river, which springs from the foot of Goljak and flows through Medveđa and Lebane; the Pusta (Deserted) river,", "id": "2857704" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nof 590 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and is not navigable. The region of Pusta Reka mostly correspondence with the river's watershed. It is located between the Pasjača mountain and lower Toplica region (on the north), the Southern Pomoravlje (Field of Leskovac, on the east), the Jablanica region (on the south) and the Radan mountain (on the west). The region is an agricultural area, almost without any industry, except for some smaller facilities in regional center, Bojnik", "id": "12523581" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nof Podina, Voljčince, Badnjevac and the smaller regional center Žitorađa. After the Toplica reaches municipal center of Doljevac, it enters the most densely populated part of the south Pomoravlje, turns north and flows into the Južna Morava at the village of Orljane, across the medieval ruins of Kurvin grad, as Južna Morava's longest left tributary. The Toplica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its own drainage area of 2,217 km². The river is not navigable. The river valley is a major traffic route in southern Serbia as", "id": "19530454" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nThe Sokobanjska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Сокобањска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in central eastern Serbia, a 58 km-long right tributary to the Južna Morava river. The Sokobanjska Moravica originates from the eastern slopes of the Devica mountain, near the village of Skrobnica. The river flows to the north, turns westward at the village of Levovik and enters the Banja region. The rivers flows between the northern slopes of the Devica and Ozren mountains (on the south) and southern slopes of the Rtanj mountain", "id": "1726356" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\nmouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. As the wider Jabllanica region, Medveđa also had an Albanian majority. These Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces in a way that today would be characterized as ethnic cleansing. Due to depopulation and economic considerations some small numbers of Albanians were allowed to stay and return though not to their previous settlements and instead were designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of", "id": "7117787" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\n, a notable Muslim population existed in the districts of Niš, Pirot, Vranje, Leskovac, Prokuplje and Kuršumlija. The rural parts of Toplica, Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the", "id": "1099558" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nthe southernmost slopes of the Suva Planina and Babička Gora mountains, it reaches the town of Vlasotince and western parts of the low Leskovac field, part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. After the villages of Batulovce and Stajkovce, the Vlasina empties into the Južna Morava, east of the Leskovac's eastern suburb of Mrštane. The Vlasina drains an area of 991 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin and it is not navigable. On 26 June 1988, after a period of heavy rains, Vlasina was a", "id": "14981332" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nThe Pusta River ( / \"Pusta reka\", \"Desolate River\") is a river in southern Serbia, a 71-km long left tributary to the South Morava. It also gives the name to the Pusta Reka region in its valley. The river originates northeast of Prolom Banja, near the Sokolovica village, on the northern tip of the Radan mountain, as the \"Golema River\" (\"Big River\"). It flows eastward, between the mountains of Radan (to the south) and Pasjača (to the", "id": "12523579" }, { "contents": "Persecution of Muslims during Ottoman contraction\n\n\nReka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the Turks were of Albanian origin. The Muslims in the cities of Niš and Pirot were Turkish-speaking; Vranje and Leskovac were Turkish- and Albanian-speaking; Prokuplje", "id": "8891598" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nvalley between Konjic and Jablanica, known simply as \"Neretva\" since Middle Ages, the new point for hydrographical division became dam of the Jablanica HPP where also is a place of confluence of the rivers Neretva and Rama. Here the Neretva river suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before it reach town of Jablanica. From this point it turns again toward south and enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes of the mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica", "id": "12890350" }, { "contents": "Rama (Neretva)\n\n\nRama is a river in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a major tributary of the Neretva. It joins it from the right by discharging into Neretva's artificial reservoir, Jablaničko lake, at place called Marina Pećina, near village of Gračac, between location of underground powerhouse of Rama Hydroelectric Power Station and Jablanica Dam, depending on water level in Jablaničko lake, some 15 kilometers upstream from Jablanica. The Rama flows through municipalities of Prozor-Rama and Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, while its headwaters together with wellsprings in the region of", "id": "3052779" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\nThe Kolubara (Serbian Cyrillic: Колубара, ), is a long river in western Serbia; it is an eastern, right tributary to the Sava river. Kolubara is formed by the two small rivers Obnica and Jablanica. \"Obnica\" is the river in Western Serbia that springs at the foot of the mountain Medvednik. It flows to the East, through the villages of Suvodanje, Bobova, Majinović, Pričević and Zlatarić, and at the city of Valjevo meets the river \"Jablanica\" and forms Kolubara. The Obnica is", "id": "20109582" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\ndating to the 4th century AD lay at various locations of the town, as it was a transitory zone of Upper Moesia; travel and postal stations are among the finds. Toponyms such as \"Arbanaška\" and \"Đjake\" shows an Albanian presence in the Toplica and Southern Morava regions (located north-east of contemporary Kosovo) before the expulsion of Albanians during 1877–1878 period. The rural parts of Jablanica valley and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river", "id": "7117786" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\naverage elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva again expands into a third and largest valley which provided fertile agricultural land before it was flooded by large artificial reservoir, Jablaničko Lake, formed after construction of a Jablanica Dam near town of Jablanica. The second section begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before reaches town of Jablanica, from which point turns again toward south. From", "id": "12890343" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nLebane () is a town and municipality located in Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 10,062 inhabitants, while the municipality has 20,000 inhabitants. The town is located at the confluence of the rivers Jablanica and Šumanska Reka, in the alluvial plain created by the former. Just northeast of the town a larger plain called Leskovačko polje extends toward the town of Leskovac, which is the district seat. The elevation of the town of Lebane is between 275.2 and 420 MASL.", "id": "17523929" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nRakic writes about it as a \"\"big village populated by Serbs, in a valley, on the river Jablanica, on its left bank.\"\" Only when Lebane got the role of Jablanica district headquarters, it began to gradually develop in a direction of a small town. The core of this small town was a series of houses along the Jablanica which is 45m wide here (as is even now); at the end of this series are the buildings of the Court and Municipality. The main feature of", "id": "17523931" }, { "contents": "Štulac (Lebane)\n\n\nthe village of Prekopčelica. The village is located on the valley slopes of the Caričin Potok creek. It is scattered between the altitudes of . It is situated in the wider Pusta Reka region. The village rests on the western slopes of the , which here divides the regions of Pusta Reka and Jablanica. On the west, the easternmost slopes of the Radan mountain begin. The village area covers . The Slavs settled in the area in the 7th century, centering around the ruins of Iustiniana Prima. Due to the lack of", "id": "11151840" }, { "contents": "Grdelica\n\n\nGrdelica () is a town in southern Serbia. It is situated in the Leskovac municipality, in the Jablanica District. The total population of the town was 3,194 people as of the 2011 census. For census purposes, Grdelica is divided into two adjacent parts, southern \"Grdelica town\" (\"Grdelica varoš\"; population 2,136) and northern \"Grdelica village\" (\"Grdelica selo\"; 1,058). Grdelica lies at the South Morava river, on the mountainous terrain at the entrance of the Grdelica Gorge. It", "id": "460756" }, { "contents": "Gornji Bučumet\n\n\nall settlements registered separately in the census. The three settlements lie in the South Morava basin, above the Jablanica river, and as such are located in the Upper Jablanica region. The highest mountain in Upper Bučumet is Paramid (853), with the mountain of Sv. Petar (1149) being located in Middle Bučumet. The three neighbourhoods of Bučumet are 470 to 853 metres above sea level. There is a medieval church built on the ruins of an older church. During the Toplica-Jablanica Operation (, ) in", "id": "12752738" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nthe huge floods of its daughter river. The South Morava has 157 tributaries. The most important left tributaries are: Jablanica, Veternica, Pusta reka and Toplica. Right tributaries are: Vrla, Vlasina, Nišava (the longest) and Sokobanjska Moravica. The South Morava has a significant potential for electricity production, and a huge hydroelectrical system (Vlasina- Vrla I-IV power stations) has been constructed in its drainage basin. To a certain extent, its waters are used for irrigation. The river valley's most important role", "id": "15699476" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nThe Rasina () is a river in south central Serbia. The long river flows through the Rasina region, gives its name to the modern Rasina District of Serbia, and flows into the Zapadna Morava near the city of Kruševac. Its historical name is Arsen (Αρσεγα). The Rasina springs from the southern slopes of the Goč mountain, near the village of Rašovka, southwest of the most famous Serbian spa, Vrnjačka Banja. The river originally flows to the southeast, around the mountains of Željin and Kopaonik, next to", "id": "209716" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nLeskovac (Serbian Cyrillic: Лесковац, ) is a city and the administrative center of the Jablanica District in southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the city urban area has 60,288 inhabitants, while the city administrative area has 144,206. Traces of life of the Brnjica culture (8th century BC) is seen at the Hisar Hill (Hisar Leskovac) that was protected by a deep moat with a palisade on its inner side, a fortification similar to that of another fortification on the site near Zlokućane in the Velika Morava basin", "id": "2857693" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nThe favorable location and the richness of nature made Jablanica valley important place since the earliest times. Traffic affordable and fertile, Leskovac valley has provided favorable conditions for the settlement of population. Archaeological findings, of which the most important are Hissar and Caričin grad (Iustiniana Prima) show that life in this area, continuously evolved from prehistoric man to date. First mention of Lebane as Hlebane dates back to 1512. Lebane is formed as a village of the same name after the liberation in 1878. Visiting Serbia in 1880s, M.", "id": "17523930" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nThe South Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Јужна Морава, Serbian Latin: \"Južna Morava\", ; ) is a river in eastern Kosovo and in southern Serbia, which represents the shorter headwater of Great Morava. Today, it is 295 km long, including its source river Binačka Morava. It flows generally in the south to north direction, from Macedonian border to Kosovo and onwards to Central Serbia, where it meets West Morava at Stalać, to create Great Morava. The river rises in the Skopska Crna Gora mountain", "id": "15699471" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\nis the Rzav's longer headstream. It originates from the Čigota mountain, eastern section of the Zlatibor mountain. The river originally flows northward, next to the villages of Vodice and Jokina Ćuprija, reaches the central section of the Zlatibor where it is dammed and creates the artificial Ribnica lake (surface area of 10 km²), after the nearby village of Ribnica. After the lake, the river sharply turns west and soon gets followed by the parallel stream of the \"Jablanica\" river. After crossing the village of Mokra Gora", "id": "11540154" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\n25 km long. Jablanica originates on the eastern slopes of the Jablanik mountain, just few kilometers away from Obnica. It curves around Parač mountain and next to the village of Balinović, before it meets Obnica in Valjevo. Jablanica is 21.5 km long. This is also the beginning of the long region of the Kolubara valley, divided in two large parts, referred to as Upper (\"gornja\") Kolubara and Lower (\"donja\") Kolubara (around the Belgrade's suburb of Obrenovac). At Valjevo, the", "id": "20109583" }, { "contents": "Jablanica District\n\n\nThe Jablanica District (, ) is one of nine administrative districts of Southern and Eastern Serbia. It expands in the south-eastern parts of Serbia. According to the 2011 census results, it has a population of 215,463 inhabitants. The administrative center of the district is the city of Leskovac. The district encompasses the municipalities of: According to the 2011 census results, the Jablanica Distract has a total population of 216,304 inhabitants. Ethnic composition of the Jablanica District: Famous cultural-historic monuments in this District are: the Roman", "id": "13223854" }, { "contents": "Kalna, Crna Trava\n\n\nKalna () is a small village in the Crna Trava municipality of the Jablanica District of Serbia. Kalna village is an old Serbian village, 35 km away from the Crna Trava. It is located between Tumba and Serbian-Bulgarian border, at an altitude of 500 to 1100 m. The total area is rural area of 7285 hectares. The Kalna can be reached from three directions: The road in this way was there since the Turkish rule. It was the shortest connection of Leskovac valley (Dubočica) to Sofia and Constantinople", "id": "11211518" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina-Neretva Canton\n\n\ntook place there during World War II and there is a large museum in Jablanica dedicated to these battles. The Neretva river runs through the cities of Konjic, Jablanica, Mostar and Čapljina before it flows through Croatia and into the Adriatic Sea. There are large lakes in the canton such as the Jablanica lake located around the city Jablanica. The southern most municipality in the canton is the Neum municipality which borders the Adriatic sea and the eastern most municipality is the Ravno municipality along the border with Croatia. Of the ten cantons comprising", "id": "3225485" }, { "contents": "Vardar Corps\n\n\nThe Vardar Corps was a corps of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland (JVuO) that operated on the left bank of the river Vardar during the World War II in Yugoslavia on the territory of modern-day North Macedonia and southern Serbia. Its commander was former Captain of the Royal Guard of the Royal Yugoslav Army Stojan Krstić. It consisted of four brigades with total number of 1,000 soldiers. Together with Jablanica Corps, South Morava Corps and Flying Corps it belonged under \"Mountain Staff 110\" () located in Sijarinska Banja", "id": "11325997" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nthe villages of Mitrovo Polje, Bzenica, Pleš, Jablanica, Grčak, Toskići, Budilovina and Milentija. When the Rasina reaches the small town of Brus, it enters the upper Rasina region and continues next to the villages of Tršanovci, Lepenac and Razbojna. At this point the river reaches the western side of the Veliki Jastrebac mountain, and makes a wide, elbow turn to the north. In this part of the course, the Rasina also makes a southeast border of the Aleksandrovačka Župa region. After the villages of Bogiše", "id": "209717" }, { "contents": "Doljanka\n\n\nDoljanka is a right tributary of Neretva river in North Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The length of Doljanka is around 18 km and reaches an altitude drop of about 400 m. Arises from sources scattered type under the far northeast slopes of Vran mountain on altitude of 1324 m. It runs through limestone canyon, which is high up to 1,200 m and flows through the village of Doljani. Doljanka flows into the Neretva River between Jablanica and Mostar, at an altitude of 300 m. It is also the connection over which trouts from the Neretva", "id": "8874715" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nValley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Albanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje", "id": "17667163" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n. The Neretva then flows northwest, through Konjic. It enters the Jablanica Reservoir (\"Jablaničko jezero\"), one of the largest in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake ends near the town of Jablanica. From here on, the Neretva turns southward, continuing to the Adriatic Sea. With the mountains lining its shores gradually receding, the Neretva enters a valley where the city of Mostar lies. It flows under the old bridge (\"Stari most\") and continues, now wider, toward the town of Čapljina and", "id": "3021139" }, { "contents": "Radan (mountain)\n\n\nRadan (Serbian Cyrillic: Радан) is a mountain in southern Serbia, near the town of Kuršumlija. Its highest peak, Šopot, has an elevation of 1,408 meters above sea level. Radan separates the valleys of the Toplica and Jablanica rivers. It is well covered with deciduous and evergreen forests. The best known spot on Radan is the Devil's Town – a peculiar rock formation consisting of hundreds of mushroom-like posts, located on its southern slopes. Near the Devil's Town there are ruins of Ivanova kula –", "id": "3957176" }, { "contents": "Crni Timok\n\n\nкотлина, \"depression of Crna Reka\"), populated with many smaller villages (Lukovo, Jablanica, Valakonje, Savinac, Gamzigrad, Zvezdan). At Gamzigrad there is also an important archeological site from Roman times. After a flow of 84 km, the Crni Timok reaches Zaječar, where it joins the Beli Timok River, forming the Veliki Timok River. It drains an area of . Early in its course it receives from the right the Radovanska, Suva, Velika, Salešča, Šarbanovačka, Jasenova, Bajnska and Suva", "id": "11459489" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (mountain range)\n\n\nJablanica ( ; ) is a mountain range in Southern and Southeastern Europe, stretching north-south direction across the border of Albania and the Republic of North Macedonia. The long mountain ridge is higher than for approximately , while the highest part, located in its very center, is Black Stone at high. Both countries have 50% of the mountain, Albania the west and North Macedonia the east. Jablanica Mountain contains many large mountain lakes. Shebenik mountain is located just to the west of Jablanica and give name to the Shebenik", "id": "3232652" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nThe Vlasina (Serbian Cyrillic: Власина), is a river in southeastern Serbia, a 70 km-long outflow of the Vlasina Lake and a right tributary to the Južna Morava, which also gives its name to the surrounding Vlasina region. The Vlasina flows out from the Vlasina Lake at an altitude of 1,213 m. Lake used to be a large, muddy peat bog, but in 1947-51 the Vlasina was dammed by the long, earth dam and the bog was turned into an artificial lake. The river flows to", "id": "14981330" }, { "contents": "Desná (Morava)\n\n\nDesná () is a river situated in Olomouc region of Czech republic, left tributary of the Morava. It is 43.4 km long, and its basin area is 338 km. The Desná river originates at the confluence of Hučivá Desná and Divoká Desná in Kouty nad Desnou, the village situated in deep valley of High Ash Mountains. The Desná then goes southwest through a valley toward the town of Šumperk. After approximately 43.4 km, the Desná flows into the Morava river near Postřelmov village.The mean annual discharge at its mouth", "id": "20977814" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nSerbian forces then headed south into the Morava valley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Muslims fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Turks fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Muslims departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessalonika. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in", "id": "1099566" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n, in the center of the region. Other larger towns include Trebinje, Stolac, Široki Brijeg, Posušje, Ljubuški, Grude, Konjic, and Čapljina. Borders between Herzegovina and Bosnia are unclear and often disputed. The upper flow of the Neretva River lies in northern Herzegovina, a heavily forested area with fast-flowing rivers and high mountains. Konjic and Jablanica lie in this area. The Neretva rises on Lebršnik Mountain, close to the Montenegro border, and as the river flows west, it enters Herzegovina. The entire", "id": "3021137" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nUpper Neretva, of the Neretva river from its source at 1,227 m.a.s.l. and headwaters gorge all the way to the town of Konjic is 90 km, flows from south to north - north-west as most of the Bosnia and Herzegovina rivers belonging to the Danube watershed, and cover some 1,390 km with average elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva briefly expanding into a wide valley which provides fertile agricultural land. There exists a large Jablaničko Lake, artificially formed after construction of dam near Jablanica. \"Second", "id": "16797216" }, { "contents": "Kubršnica\n\n\nThe Kubršnica (Serbian Cyrillic: Кубршница) is a river in Šumadija region of central Serbia, a 42 km-long left and the longest tributary to the Jasenica river. The Kubršnica originates from the Venčac mountain, in the Jasenica sub-region of Šumadija, in the wider area of the town of Aranđelovac. The terrain in the source area of the river is rich in marble and fireclay. The river flows to the east, next to the Aranđelovac's suburb of Banja and turns north near Topola. After the villages", "id": "5629731" }, { "contents": "Peć Bistrica\n\n\nkm-long, Rugovo glacier. The gorge is sparsely inhabited (the village of Mali Štupelj). As it comes out of the gorge, the Peć Bistrica reaches the town of Peć and enters the bottom of the Metohija depression through which it flows for the rest of its course. It runs parallel to the flows of the White Drin to the north and the Dečanska Bistrica to the south, next to the villages of Goraždevac, Lješane, Jablanica, Drenovce and Zaimovo, before it empties into the White Drin south of", "id": "15886949" }, { "contents": "Zlatibor\n\n\nsylvestris\" var. \"zlatiborica\" is a subspecies of pine originating from the mountain, and is endangered today. A hill by the name of Cigla\",\" located near the nearby village of Jablanica, still has some borderline markings of the Kingdom of Serbia, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Zlatibor itself is located in the northern part of the Stari Vlah region, a historical border region between Raška, Herzegovina and Bosnia. It spreads over an area of , in length, southeast to northwest, and up", "id": "3906304" }, { "contents": "Serbian Christmas traditions\n\n\nhousehold. The members of the group were called \"koledari\". The \"koleda\" was carried out from the Feast of Saint Ignatius Theophorus (five days before Christmas) up until the Epiphany. This custom was best preserved in the upper Pčinja District, and in the region around the River South Morava in the Jablanica District, southeastern Serbia. Regarded as pagan and discouraged by the Serbian Orthodox Church, the \"koleda\" ceased to be performed among most of the Serbs during the 19th and 20th centuries. \"Koledari\"", "id": "20573743" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwere designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of Medveđa have small numbers of Albanians and their descendants remained. This was due to a local Ottoman Albanian commander Shahid Pasha from the Jablanica area negotiating on good terms with Prince Milan and thereby guaranteeing their presence. Some other Albanians such as merchants attempted to remain in Niš, but they left after murders occurred and their property was sold off at low values. In 1879, some Albanian refugees from", "id": "1099570" }, { "contents": "Kosovo Pomoravlje\n\n\nThe region's largest cities are Gjilan and Bujanovac. The region is known as \"Kosovsko Pomoravlje\" (Косовско Поморавље, \"Morava Valley of Kosovo\") in Serbian and as Lugina e Anamoraves Binçes (\"Valley of Binač Morava\") in Albanian. Its name is derived from the Binač Morava River, which flows through northern Macedonia, eastern Kosovo and southern Serbia as part of the Great Morava river system. The region includes part of the valley and the Karadak and Koznik mountains. Gjilan has six municipalities and 287 smaller", "id": "13339352" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nAlbanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje, with the intention of then turning west and", "id": "17667142" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\nThe Resavčina (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресавчина) is a river in Serbia, a 32 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. It is sometimes also called \"Resavica\" or \"Resava\" (not to be confused with another Velika Morava's right tributary of Resava or its own tributary of Resavica). The Resavčina originates near the village of Proštinac in Svilajnac municipality. The river originally flows to the north, but soon turns west at the village of Dubnica and enters the western half of the Veliko Pomoravlje region", "id": "4886222" }, { "contents": "Ibar (river)\n\n\nThe Ibar, also known as the Ibër and Ibri (, , ), is a river that flows through eastern Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, with a total length of . The river begins in the Hajla mountain, in Rožaje, eastern Montenegro, and passes through Kosovo to flow into the West Morava river near Kraljevo, central Serbia. It belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area is , with an average discharge of 60 m³/s at the mouth. It is not navigable. The Ibar originates from", "id": "4536148" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Ilirska Bistrica\n\n\nJablanica (; ) is a settlement southeast of Ilirska Bistrica in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. Jablanica is the site of three known mass graves or unmarked graves from the end of the Second World War. They all contain the remains of German soldiers from the 97th Corps that were killed at the beginning of May 1945. The Mountain Fields Mass Grave (), also known as the Mountain Mass Grave (), lies in a meadow about 1.6 km northeast of Jablanica and contains the remains of 10 soldiers. The Solne Mass", "id": "16911511" }, { "contents": "Čezsoča\n\n\nČezsoča (; ) is a settlement in the Municipality of Bovec in the Littoral region of Slovenia. It includes the hamlets of Gorenja Vas (), Dolenja Vas (), Jablanica, Kršovec, and Na Glavi. Čezsoča lies in the valley on the left bank of the Soča River. The terrain then rises up towards Mount Polovnik (1,480 m). East of the settlement is Humčič Hill (810 m), behind which rises Mount Javoršček (1,557 m). Oplenk Creek flows through the village between Gorenja Vas and", "id": "14920585" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nJablanica, the Neretva enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching in depth. Three hydroelectric dams operate between Jablanica and Mostar. When the Neretva expands for the second and final time, it reaches its third section. This area is often colloquially called the \"\"Bosnian and Herzegovinian California\"\". The last of its course forms wide alluvial delta, before the river empties into the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Tatinac (also known as the", "id": "12890344" }, { "contents": "Jablaničko lake\n\n\nJablaničko lake () is a large artificially formed lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva briefly expands into a wide valley. River provided lot of fertile, agricultural land there, before lake flooded most of it. The lake was created in 1953 after construction of Jablanica Dam near Jablanica in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake has an irregular elongated shape. Its width varies along its length. The lake is a popular vacation destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Swimming, boating and especially fishing are popular activities", "id": "13828307" }, { "contents": "Jablanica Dam\n\n\nThe Jablanica Dam is an arch-gravity dam on the Neretva River about northeast of Jablanica in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The dam was constructed between 1947 and 1955 with the primary purpose of hydroelectric power production. The power station was commissioned in two stages, from 1955 until 1958. The first generator was commissioned in February 1955. An upgrade in 2008 increased the installed capacity of the power station from 150 MW to 180 MW. The dam's power station is located about to the southeast near Jablanica", "id": "854706" }, { "contents": "Jablanik\n\n\nJablanik (Serbian Cyrillic: Јабланик) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Valjevo. Its highest peak \"Jablanik\" has an elevation of 1,275 meters(10001020_ above sea level. Jablanik is located at the source of the river Jablanica. It is separated from nearby Medvednik mountain by high pass Stolica, while the Debelo Brdo saddle separates it from Povlen in the southeast. The highest peak has the same name as the mountain itself - Jablanik, and is 1,275 m high. The hills around the peak are mainly", "id": "366162" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\nThe Nišava or Nishava (Bulgarian and , ) is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia, a right tributary, and with a length of 218 km also the longest one, of the South Morava. The Nišava originates in western Bulgaria, in the Stara Planina mountains (east of Kom Peak) near the village of Gintsi. Its source is close to the Serbian border. It enters Serbia after 67 km of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries. Because it flows through Gintsi, the upper course of the river is", "id": "9627075" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nAfter Mramorac village, the Jasenica spills over in several parallel flows, which continue until its confluence. After the Pridvorica and Vodice villages (on different arms of the river), the Jasenica reaches the town of Smederevska Palanka, the most populous settlement in its valley. This is also where the Kubršnica, its main tributary, flows into it from the left. The Jasenica then gently bends to the east, flowing into the Great Morava near the village of Veliko Orašje (the southern arm of the river flows through the town", "id": "3481502" }, { "contents": "Gruža (river)\n\n\nThe Gruža (Serbian Cyrillic: Гружа, ) is a river in central Serbia. The river is a 62 km long left tributary to the Zapadna Morava. The Gruža originates in the central part of the Rudnik mountain, right under the mountain's main settlement, the village of Rudnik, northeast of the town of Gornji Milanovac, central Serbia. The river flows south next to the village of Majdan, around the Rudnik mountain into the Takovo region and at the village of Nevade, just few kilometers away from Gornji Milanovac,", "id": "10971320" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\n(hamlet Panjak) on the Serbian-Bosnian border Crni Rzav meets the Jablanica river at the village Gornje Vardište and finally the river Beli Rzav at the village of Donje Vardište. The Rzav continues as the natural extension of the Beli Rzav, but since the Black Rzav is longer, the latter is considered to be the main headstream. It floes between the southernmost part of the Zvijezda mountain (\"Ponos\" peak) from the north and the Suha Gora mountain from the south, next to the villages of Prosjek (and", "id": "11540155" }, { "contents": "Ub (river)\n\n\nThe Ub (Serbian Cyrillic: Уб) is a river in western Serbia, a 57 km-long right and longest tributary to Tamnava river. The Ub originates from the Vlašić mountain in Podgorina region of west Serbia, near the village of Kasapo. From its source to the mouth, the river flows to the east, parallel to the river Tamnava, which it will eventually join. The villages located in the upper section of the river's flow are Družetić, Pambukovica and Čučuge, where the Ub slightly turns to the", "id": "2261401" }, { "contents": "Olomouc Region\n\n\nof the region is situated on the water level of the Morava River near to Kojetín in the Přerov District (190 m above sea level). The Morava river flows through the region and the majority of the region's territory belongs to Morava’s drainage basin. A small northern part of the region belongs to the drainage basin of Odra River, which flows to the Baltic Sea. The Olomouc Region offers a great variety of natural points of interest. Protected landscape area of the Jeseníky mountains offers a number of scenic places such", "id": "11419394" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina\n\n\nJablanica is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is situated on the Neretva river and Jablanica lake. The municipality of Jablanica is a major tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The municipality offer a wide variety of activities. The surrounding mountains such as Plasa, Čvrsnica and Prenj offer both hunting grounds and a variety of hiking trails. One popular hiking destination is \"Hajdučka Vrata\", a natural wonder, the product of wind", "id": "9009264" }, { "contents": "Krupá (Morava)\n\n\nKrupá (German: Graupa Bach) is a creek in Šumperk District, Moravia, left tributary of the Morava. Its length is 19,2 km and its drainage basin covers 112.7 km2. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 4.48 m³/s. The Krupá originates in Czech part of the Śnieżnik Mountains, 400 meters above sea level. The Krupá then goes south toward the town of Staré Město. It flows into the Morava river near Hanušovice town. River keeps its natural character with meanders and original riversides. A river bottom is", "id": "1745557" }, { "contents": "Oskava (river)\n\n\nOskava is a river in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic, left tributary of the Morava river. Its length is 50.3 km and its drainage basin covers 569 km. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 3.53 m/s. The Oskava originates from southeast slope of Kamenná hora in Hrubý Jeseník, 215 meters above sea level. The river is surrounded by woods in upper reaches, flows through hills of Nízký Jeseník in middle reaches and its lower reaches is situated in swampy floodplain of Litovelské Pomoraví Protected Landscape Area.", "id": "8538845" }, { "contents": "Crna Trava\n\n\nCrna Trava ( ) is a village and municipality located in the Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to 2011 census, the population of the village is 434 inhabitants, while population of the municipality is 1,663. This is the smallest by population and poorest municipality in Serbia. Crna Trava is famous for its migrant builders, who are considered the best in the region and are colloquially described as \"building half of Yugoslavia\". The name of the village in Serbian translates to \"Black Grass\". The origin of the name", "id": "18032485" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\n. At the village of Kušiljevo, the river receives the small stream of \"Beljeva\" from the left and turns northward, which is the general direction of its course for the rest of the flow. The river flows parallel to the Velika Morava river as its satellite flow, in the Morava's floodplain, so there are no settlements on the Resavica itself, but several large villages are located in its valley (Porodin, Žabari, Simićevo, Aleksandrovac Požarevački, Vlaški Do, Poljana), all of them located on the", "id": "4886223" }, { "contents": "Lugomir\n\n\nThe Lugomir (Serbian Cyrillic: Лугомир) is a river in central Serbia, a 57 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. The Lugomir originates from two headstreams, the Dulenska reka and the Županjevačka reka. The shorter headstream of Županjevačka reka (Cyrillic: \"Жупањевачка река\") originates from the mountain of Gledićke planine in southern Šumadija region of central Serbia. Its spring is just some 500 m away from the source of Lugomir's another headstream, the Dulenska reka. The river first flows to the east", "id": "5130918" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\ncities in Serbia, 10 km after which the Nišava empties into the Južna Morava. However, with the rapid growth of Niš in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs, the banks of the Nišava are urbanized almost to its mouth. After being divided into districts in 1992, the Nišava District (with Niš as administrative center) is named after the river. The river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area covers 4,086 km, of which about 73% in Serbia, the rest in Bulgaria", "id": "9627077" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nsection\" begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama river between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes a southern course and enter a largest canyons of its course, running through steep slopes of magnificent mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching 800–1200 meters in depth. From here Neretva flows toward the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Jezernica (also Tatinac), the Gornji and Donji Krupac, the Ljuta-Dindolka, the Jesenica, the Bjelimićka Rijeka, the Slatinica, the Račica, the Rakitnica, the Konjička", "id": "16797217" }, { "contents": "Resava (river)\n\n\nThe Resava (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресава) is a river in central Serbia, a 65 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava. It also gives the name to the surrounding Resava region, the Resava Monastery, the coal mines in its valley and a popular tourist destination of Resava Cave. The Resava originates from the Homolje region in eastern Serbia. It springs out at an altitude of 1,100 m and flows westward between the mountains of Beljanica (on the north) and Kučaj (on the south). In its", "id": "15040274" }, { "contents": "A1 motorway (Serbia)\n\n\nJužna Morava river. Southern section (Niš–Leskovac–Vranje–Macedonian border) consists of 128 km that are in service, while additional 26 km are under construction. Construction of southern section has been completed by May 2019, and last sections opened for traffic on 18 May 2019: Highway passes through valley of South Morava, passes west of Niš, by Merošina and Leskovac, and after Grdelica built highway ends. 26 kilometers of highway under construction passes through Grdelica gorge, very difficult terrain. This sections is often considered", "id": "1785427" }, { "contents": "Čivelj\n\n\nČivelj is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in the municipality of Jablanica, Herzegovina-Neretva Canton, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1991, the village had six inhabitants, all of whom were Muslims. In 2013, Čivelj had 10 inhabitants. Tourism is solid. Civelj is placed 8 kilometres from Jablanica and it is placed on Jablanica lake. In lake there are 5 types of fishes including the most popular \"pastrmka\". The village was found in 1911. by local fishermen. Near Civelj", "id": "4645021" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nAlthough these streams are of low outflow, there are also numerous wellsprings rising on both sides of the canyon at the river banks, with high-capacity discharge. Three large hydroelectric power stations operate in this section of the Neretva, between Jablanica and Mostar, namely Grabovica HPP, Salakovac HPP and Mostar HPP. Jablanica lake is a large artificial lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva expands into a wide valley. The river provided fertile, agricultural land before the lake flooded most of it. The lake", "id": "12890353" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nThe Jasenica (Serbian Cyrillic: Јасеница, ) is a river in central Serbia. It is long and is the left tributary of the Great Morava. This river gives the name to the surrounding region. The Jasenica originates from several streams, most notably the Đurinci (Cyrillic: Ђуринци) from Venčac mountain, and the Srebrenica (Cyrillic: Сребреница) from the northern slopes of the Rudnik mountain in central Serbia. At its origin, the river runs through the eastern border of the Kačer region. It flows to the southeast", "id": "3481500" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nin north Skopje, Macedonia. The streams Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is, after passing the Macedonian-Serbian border, known as the Binačka Morava. After 49 km it meets the Preševska Moravica at Bujanovac, and for the remainder, 246 km, flows as the South Morava. The South Morava belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and its own drainage area is 15,696 km², of which 1,237 km² is in Bulgaria (through its right tributary Nišava). Its average", "id": "15699472" }, { "contents": "Pešter\n\n\nRivers Uvac, Vapa, Jablanica and Grabovica flow through the plateau. In the geologic past, the field was a large lake, of which only a small Sjenica lake near the village of Tuzinje remained. The soil is mostly karst interspersed with pastures. Economy of the area relies primarily on cattle breeding, chiefly sheep. Pešter is famous for its dairy products, especially the \"Sjenica cheese\" (\"Sjenički sir\"), as well as lamb and prosciutto. The plateau is sparsely populated: most settlements are on the", "id": "16748290" }, { "contents": "Sredačka župa\n\n\nSredačka Župa (; \"county of Sredska\") is a remote geographical region, a valley, in southeastern Kosovo, below the Šar Mountains at the source of the Prizrenska Bistrica. The region, an oval basin, lies below the Šar Mountains, at the source, upper stream of the Prizrenska Bistrica (\"Prizren river\"). South of the region between the Prizren mountains and Koritnik mountain, lies the Gora region. It currently includes Sredska, Pousko, Jablanica, Lokvica, Rečane, Živinjane, Planjane, Nebregošte,", "id": "13372292" }, { "contents": "Binačka Morava\n\n\nBinačka Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Биначка Морава; ) or (\"Mirusha\") is a river which flows in southeastern Kosovo and North Macedonia. It flows generally in the southwest to northeast direction, from Macedonian border to Bujanovac, where, after 49 km, meets Preševska Moravica, to create South Morava. The river begins in the mountain of Skopska Crna Gora, in North Macedonia, north of its capital Skopje. Streams of Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is,", "id": "12867615" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwar, the Albanian population depending on the area reacted differently to incoming Serbian forces by either offering resistance or fleeing toward nearby mountains and Ottoman Kosovo. Although most of these Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces, a small presence was allowed to remain in the Jablanica valley where their descendants live today. Serbs from Lab moved to Serbia during and after the first round of hostilities in 1876, while incoming Albanian refugees thereafter 1878 repopulated their villages. Albanian refugees also settled alongside the north-eastern Ottoman-Serbian border, in urban areas", "id": "1099553" }, { "contents": "Banjska River\n\n\nThe Banjska River ( / \"Banjska reka\", \"Baths River\"), is a river in southern Serbia, the right tributary of Toplica in which it flows near Kuršumlija. It rises under the far south-eastern branch of Kopaonik. It is 22 km long, with a river basin area of 155 km². The average flow at the mouth is 0,7 m³/s. The valley of the river is mostly ravines, while the basin is rich in forest. The Kuršumlija-Kuršumlijska Banja-Prepolac Pass-Podujevo-", "id": "14979528" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nby a catastrophic flood. Then unregulated river Jablanica, swollen after a long rainy period, broke on June 6, spilled out of its banks and caused enormous material damage Lebane. Flood toll was paid and human victims (killed two people). After this tragic event, with financial help, Lebane begins to industrialize faster, and the process of industrialization has caused more versatile and faster development of the city. According to the 2011 census, the municipality has 22,000 inhabitants. The ethnic composition of the municipality: The following table", "id": "17523935" }, { "contents": "Čvrsnica\n\n\nČvrsnica () is a mountain in the Dinarides of Bosnia and Herzegovina, located in northern Herzegovina, most of the mountain is located in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton municipalities of Mostar and Jablanica while the smaller part of the mountain, around 10% is located in the municipality of Posušje. The highest peak (Pločno) is 2228 metres. Čvrsnica is surrounded by the river Neretva from the east (20 km), its tributaries Doljanka (18 km) from the north and Drežanka (19.8 km) from the south,", "id": "6129606" }, { "contents": "Myjava (river)\n\n\nThe Myjava River is a river in western Slovakia and for a small part in the Czech Republic and left tributary of the Morava River. It rises in the White Carpathians near the village of Nová Lhota in Moravia, but crosses the Czech-Slovak border shortly afterwards and flows in a southern direction until the town of Myjava, where it enters the Myjava Hills and turns west. Near Sobotište it flows into the Záhorie Lowland and turns south until the village of Jablonica, turning northwest and from Senica it flows west, passing through", "id": "2099838" }, { "contents": "West Morava\n\n\nSouth and Great Morava's meridian (south-to-north) flow, the West Morava runs in an opposed, latitudinal (west-to-east) direction, dividing the region of Šumadija of the central Serbia from the southern parts of the country. Due to the West Morava's direction, it flows between many mountains, regions and sub-regions: The West Morava river valley, Zapadno Pomoravlje, is economically the most developed of all three Morava river valleys. With the valley of the Ibar, the West", "id": "7786624" }, { "contents": "Ralja (river)\n\n\nThe Ralja () is a river in Šumadija region of Serbia, a 51 km long left tributary to the Jezava, a tributary of the Great Morava river. It also gives its name to the surrounding Šumadija's subregion of Ralja. The Ralja originates from the northern part of the Kosmaj mountain, north of the village of Velika Ivanča, in the Sopot municipality of the City of Belgrade. Almost from the source, the river valley is a route for the Belgrade-Niš railway. At the villages of Popović and Mali", "id": "2491229" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nBovan gorge carved by the river and is very popular local and regional tourist destination, especially among campers and fishermen, but the coastline is not put in order. The river continues to the south, in an inverse flow, and after the villages of Subotinac and Kraljevo, it empties into the Južna Morava at the town of Aleksinac. The lower section used to be a coal mining area too, just like the upper one, but the mines (Aleksinački Rudnik) are closed now. The Sokobanjska Moravica brlongs to the Black", "id": "1726358" }, { "contents": "Golijska Moravica\n\n\nThe Golijska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Голијска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in western Serbia. With a length of 98 km, it is the longer headstream of the Zapadna Morava (it forms it with the Đetinja), and thus, of the Velika Morava. Its name, Moravica, means \"little Morava\" in Serbian, and it also gives its name to the surrounding region and the modern Moravica District of Serbia. The Golijska Moravica originates from the western slopes of the Golija mountain and flows", "id": "5380325" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\n. The Nišava is not navigable. It is not only the longest tributary of the Južna Morava, but also the largest one in terms of discharge (36 km/s). It has many smaller tributaries, the most important being the Temštica from the right, and the Jerma (or Sukovska reka), Crvena reka, Koritnička reka and Kutinska reka from the left. The Nišava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia: the route follows the valleys of the Morava", "id": "9627078" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nThe Toplica (Serbian Cyrillic: Топлица, ) is a river in southern Serbia. The river is 130 km long and gives its name to the region it flows through, which constitutes most of the modern Toplica District of Serbia. The Toplica originates under the name of \"Duboka\" from the eastern slopes of the Kopaonik mountain, just south of the highest peak, Pančićev vrh. It flows to the southeast, on the western slopes of the Lepa Gora mountain, next to the villages of Merćez, Selova, Žuč,", "id": "19530451" }, { "contents": "Great Morava\n\n\nof the Velika Morava's right tributary Resava). The average discharge of the Velika Morava on its confluence with Danube is 255 m³/s (120 m³/s brought by Zapadna Morava, 100 m³/s by Južna Morava, and 35 m³/s amounted by the Velika Morava itself). Tributaries of the Velika Morava are short, the longest one being the Jasenica (79 km) and others rarely exceeding 50 km. Right tributaries are: Jovanovačka reka, Crnica, Ravanica, Resava and Resavica (or Resavčina). Left tributaries are more numerous,", "id": "2295702" }, { "contents": "Vevčani\n\n\nVevčani () is a village in the Republic of North Macedonia. It is the only settlement and seat of Vevčani Municipality. The village of Vevčani is found in the southwestern range at the foot of the Jablanica mountain range. It is situated from 800 – 950 metres above sea level. The village is located 14 km North-West of the town of Struga. The village is situated near the villages of Oktisi, Velešta, Podgorci, Gorna Belica with the Albanian border to the West of the village. The famous Vevčani", "id": "5042995" } ]
The Jablanica ( Serbian : Јабланица , ) is an river in southern Serbia . A left tributary of the South ( or Južna ) Morava river , it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia 's [START_ENT] Jablanica District [END_ENT] , with the region contributing about one third of the district 's area . The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain , near the village of Grbavce , on the administrative border of the Kosovo province . The area is rich in thermal springs , so several spas are located near the river : Stara Banja , Ravna Banja and Sijarina with popular Sijarinska Banja . At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary Čokotinska reka ( Cyrillic : Чокотинска река ) , turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point . The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the and Radan mountains , in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the in Kosovo . The river flows eastward , passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo , before reaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac , part of the depression of Leskovac , which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava . In the region , near Lebane , a famed archeological find of ( Iustiniana Prima ) is located . The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo , Vranovce , Bošnjace , Turekovac and Stopanje , reaches Vinarce , the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac , and turns north . First it flows parallel to the Veternica river , to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje , then parallel to the Južna Morava . After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava . From Pečenjevce , a parallel flow ( canal ) begins , connecting the Jablanica and s , some 15 km to the north . Through Južna Morava , the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin , draining an area of 895 km ² itself . It 's not navigable and has an average discharge of 6 m ³ / s , which in rainy years grows much higher , so the river floods its valley causing lots of material damage . The name of the river , Jablanica , in Serbian means the
f4065875-ea37-4164-9422-287288709700_river:3
[{"answer": "Jablanica District", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "696682", "title": "Jablanica District"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nreaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac, part of the depression of Leskovac, which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. In the region, near Lebane, a famed archeological find of Caričin grad (\"Iustiniana Prima\") is located. The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo, Vranovce, Bošnjace, Turekovac and Stopanje, reaches Vinarce, the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac", "id": "3481303" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\n, and turns north. First it flows parallel to the Veternica river, to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje, then parallel to the Južna Morava. After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava. From Pečenjevce, a parallel flow (canal) begins, connecting the Jablanica and Toplica rivers, some 15 km to the north. Through Južna Morava, the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, draining an area of itself. It's not navigable", "id": "3481304" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\npopular Sijarinska Banja. At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary \"Čokotinska reka\" (Cyrillic: \"Чокотинска река\"), turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point. The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the Majdan and Radan mountains, in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the District of Priština in Kosovo. The river flows eastward, passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo, before", "id": "3481302" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nThe Jablanica (, ) is an river in southern Serbia. A left tributary of the South (or Južna) Morava river, it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia's Jablanica District, with the region contributing about one third of the district's area. The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain, near the village of Grbavce, on the border with Kosovo. The area is rich in thermal springs, so several spas are located near the river: Stara Banja, Ravna Banja and Sijarina with", "id": "3481301" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nJablanica with third parallel flow, the \"Sušica\", being formed in between. Settlements include many small villages, like Vina, Bukova Gora, Miroševce, Žabljane, Beli Potok and Strojkovce. In the Leskovac field, the river gently turns north, receives the Sušica from the left and reaches the town of Leskovac. The Veternica continues northward, being connected to the Jablanica river by the canal at the village of Bogojevce, before it empties into the Južna Morava. The Veternica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its", "id": "11539775" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nThe Veternica (Serbian Cyrillic: Ветерница, ) is a river in southern Serbia, a 75 km long left tributary to the Južna Morava, which gives the name to the region surrounding its valley. The Veternica originates from the Grot peak, the southernmost part of the Kukavica mountain. Four smaller streams meet at the village of Vlase and continue to the north as the Veternica. The river flows next to the villages of Golemo Selo, Oštra Glava and Gagince, where it flows parallel to the Jablanica river. As the Veternica", "id": "11539773" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nbends to the northeast, it enters the low Veternica region, part of the Leskovac field in the composite valley of the Južna Morava. Small region, located between the Kukavica mountain on the south and the Jablanica region on the north, is divided in two micro-regions, upper one being centered on the small town of Vučje (which is not located on the river itself) while the center of the lower micro-region is the town of Leskovac. As it enters the region, the Veternica furthers away from the", "id": "11539774" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nthe west, Kukavica and Čemernik in the south and Babička Gora, Seličevica and Suva Planina to the east. The largest river in the region of Leskovac is the South Morava River, which flows south to north. Tributaries of the South Morava are: the Vlasina river, which collects water from Lake Vlasina and flows through Crna Trava and Vlasotince; the Veternica river, which flows through Leskovac; the Jablanica river, which springs from the foot of Goljak and flows through Medveđa and Lebane; the Pusta (Deserted) river,", "id": "2857704" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nof 590 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and is not navigable. The region of Pusta Reka mostly correspondence with the river's watershed. It is located between the Pasjača mountain and lower Toplica region (on the north), the Southern Pomoravlje (Field of Leskovac, on the east), the Jablanica region (on the south) and the Radan mountain (on the west). The region is an agricultural area, almost without any industry, except for some smaller facilities in regional center, Bojnik", "id": "12523581" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nof Podina, Voljčince, Badnjevac and the smaller regional center Žitorađa. After the Toplica reaches municipal center of Doljevac, it enters the most densely populated part of the south Pomoravlje, turns north and flows into the Južna Morava at the village of Orljane, across the medieval ruins of Kurvin grad, as Južna Morava's longest left tributary. The Toplica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its own drainage area of 2,217 km². The river is not navigable. The river valley is a major traffic route in southern Serbia as", "id": "19530454" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nThe Sokobanjska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Сокобањска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in central eastern Serbia, a 58 km-long right tributary to the Južna Morava river. The Sokobanjska Moravica originates from the eastern slopes of the Devica mountain, near the village of Skrobnica. The river flows to the north, turns westward at the village of Levovik and enters the Banja region. The rivers flows between the northern slopes of the Devica and Ozren mountains (on the south) and southern slopes of the Rtanj mountain", "id": "1726356" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\nmouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. As the wider Jabllanica region, Medveđa also had an Albanian majority. These Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces in a way that today would be characterized as ethnic cleansing. Due to depopulation and economic considerations some small numbers of Albanians were allowed to stay and return though not to their previous settlements and instead were designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of", "id": "7117787" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\n, a notable Muslim population existed in the districts of Niš, Pirot, Vranje, Leskovac, Prokuplje and Kuršumlija. The rural parts of Toplica, Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the", "id": "1099558" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nthe southernmost slopes of the Suva Planina and Babička Gora mountains, it reaches the town of Vlasotince and western parts of the low Leskovac field, part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. After the villages of Batulovce and Stajkovce, the Vlasina empties into the Južna Morava, east of the Leskovac's eastern suburb of Mrštane. The Vlasina drains an area of 991 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin and it is not navigable. On 26 June 1988, after a period of heavy rains, Vlasina was a", "id": "14981332" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nThe Pusta River ( / \"Pusta reka\", \"Desolate River\") is a river in southern Serbia, a 71-km long left tributary to the South Morava. It also gives the name to the Pusta Reka region in its valley. The river originates northeast of Prolom Banja, near the Sokolovica village, on the northern tip of the Radan mountain, as the \"Golema River\" (\"Big River\"). It flows eastward, between the mountains of Radan (to the south) and Pasjača (to the", "id": "12523579" }, { "contents": "Persecution of Muslims during Ottoman contraction\n\n\nReka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the Turks were of Albanian origin. The Muslims in the cities of Niš and Pirot were Turkish-speaking; Vranje and Leskovac were Turkish- and Albanian-speaking; Prokuplje", "id": "8891598" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nvalley between Konjic and Jablanica, known simply as \"Neretva\" since Middle Ages, the new point for hydrographical division became dam of the Jablanica HPP where also is a place of confluence of the rivers Neretva and Rama. Here the Neretva river suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before it reach town of Jablanica. From this point it turns again toward south and enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes of the mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica", "id": "12890350" }, { "contents": "Rama (Neretva)\n\n\nRama is a river in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a major tributary of the Neretva. It joins it from the right by discharging into Neretva's artificial reservoir, Jablaničko lake, at place called Marina Pećina, near village of Gračac, between location of underground powerhouse of Rama Hydroelectric Power Station and Jablanica Dam, depending on water level in Jablaničko lake, some 15 kilometers upstream from Jablanica. The Rama flows through municipalities of Prozor-Rama and Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, while its headwaters together with wellsprings in the region of", "id": "3052779" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\nThe Kolubara (Serbian Cyrillic: Колубара, ), is a long river in western Serbia; it is an eastern, right tributary to the Sava river. Kolubara is formed by the two small rivers Obnica and Jablanica. \"Obnica\" is the river in Western Serbia that springs at the foot of the mountain Medvednik. It flows to the East, through the villages of Suvodanje, Bobova, Majinović, Pričević and Zlatarić, and at the city of Valjevo meets the river \"Jablanica\" and forms Kolubara. The Obnica is", "id": "20109582" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\ndating to the 4th century AD lay at various locations of the town, as it was a transitory zone of Upper Moesia; travel and postal stations are among the finds. Toponyms such as \"Arbanaška\" and \"Đjake\" shows an Albanian presence in the Toplica and Southern Morava regions (located north-east of contemporary Kosovo) before the expulsion of Albanians during 1877–1878 period. The rural parts of Jablanica valley and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river", "id": "7117786" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\naverage elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva again expands into a third and largest valley which provided fertile agricultural land before it was flooded by large artificial reservoir, Jablaničko Lake, formed after construction of a Jablanica Dam near town of Jablanica. The second section begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before reaches town of Jablanica, from which point turns again toward south. From", "id": "12890343" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nLebane () is a town and municipality located in Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 10,062 inhabitants, while the municipality has 20,000 inhabitants. The town is located at the confluence of the rivers Jablanica and Šumanska Reka, in the alluvial plain created by the former. Just northeast of the town a larger plain called Leskovačko polje extends toward the town of Leskovac, which is the district seat. The elevation of the town of Lebane is between 275.2 and 420 MASL.", "id": "17523929" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nRakic writes about it as a \"\"big village populated by Serbs, in a valley, on the river Jablanica, on its left bank.\"\" Only when Lebane got the role of Jablanica district headquarters, it began to gradually develop in a direction of a small town. The core of this small town was a series of houses along the Jablanica which is 45m wide here (as is even now); at the end of this series are the buildings of the Court and Municipality. The main feature of", "id": "17523931" }, { "contents": "Štulac (Lebane)\n\n\nthe village of Prekopčelica. The village is located on the valley slopes of the Caričin Potok creek. It is scattered between the altitudes of . It is situated in the wider Pusta Reka region. The village rests on the western slopes of the , which here divides the regions of Pusta Reka and Jablanica. On the west, the easternmost slopes of the Radan mountain begin. The village area covers . The Slavs settled in the area in the 7th century, centering around the ruins of Iustiniana Prima. Due to the lack of", "id": "11151840" }, { "contents": "Grdelica\n\n\nGrdelica () is a town in southern Serbia. It is situated in the Leskovac municipality, in the Jablanica District. The total population of the town was 3,194 people as of the 2011 census. For census purposes, Grdelica is divided into two adjacent parts, southern \"Grdelica town\" (\"Grdelica varoš\"; population 2,136) and northern \"Grdelica village\" (\"Grdelica selo\"; 1,058). Grdelica lies at the South Morava river, on the mountainous terrain at the entrance of the Grdelica Gorge. It", "id": "460756" }, { "contents": "Gornji Bučumet\n\n\nall settlements registered separately in the census. The three settlements lie in the South Morava basin, above the Jablanica river, and as such are located in the Upper Jablanica region. The highest mountain in Upper Bučumet is Paramid (853), with the mountain of Sv. Petar (1149) being located in Middle Bučumet. The three neighbourhoods of Bučumet are 470 to 853 metres above sea level. There is a medieval church built on the ruins of an older church. During the Toplica-Jablanica Operation (, ) in", "id": "12752738" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nthe huge floods of its daughter river. The South Morava has 157 tributaries. The most important left tributaries are: Jablanica, Veternica, Pusta reka and Toplica. Right tributaries are: Vrla, Vlasina, Nišava (the longest) and Sokobanjska Moravica. The South Morava has a significant potential for electricity production, and a huge hydroelectrical system (Vlasina- Vrla I-IV power stations) has been constructed in its drainage basin. To a certain extent, its waters are used for irrigation. The river valley's most important role", "id": "15699476" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nThe Rasina () is a river in south central Serbia. The long river flows through the Rasina region, gives its name to the modern Rasina District of Serbia, and flows into the Zapadna Morava near the city of Kruševac. Its historical name is Arsen (Αρσεγα). The Rasina springs from the southern slopes of the Goč mountain, near the village of Rašovka, southwest of the most famous Serbian spa, Vrnjačka Banja. The river originally flows to the southeast, around the mountains of Željin and Kopaonik, next to", "id": "209716" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nLeskovac (Serbian Cyrillic: Лесковац, ) is a city and the administrative center of the Jablanica District in southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the city urban area has 60,288 inhabitants, while the city administrative area has 144,206. Traces of life of the Brnjica culture (8th century BC) is seen at the Hisar Hill (Hisar Leskovac) that was protected by a deep moat with a palisade on its inner side, a fortification similar to that of another fortification on the site near Zlokućane in the Velika Morava basin", "id": "2857693" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nThe favorable location and the richness of nature made Jablanica valley important place since the earliest times. Traffic affordable and fertile, Leskovac valley has provided favorable conditions for the settlement of population. Archaeological findings, of which the most important are Hissar and Caričin grad (Iustiniana Prima) show that life in this area, continuously evolved from prehistoric man to date. First mention of Lebane as Hlebane dates back to 1512. Lebane is formed as a village of the same name after the liberation in 1878. Visiting Serbia in 1880s, M.", "id": "17523930" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nThe South Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Јужна Морава, Serbian Latin: \"Južna Morava\", ; ) is a river in eastern Kosovo and in southern Serbia, which represents the shorter headwater of Great Morava. Today, it is 295 km long, including its source river Binačka Morava. It flows generally in the south to north direction, from Macedonian border to Kosovo and onwards to Central Serbia, where it meets West Morava at Stalać, to create Great Morava. The river rises in the Skopska Crna Gora mountain", "id": "15699471" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\nis the Rzav's longer headstream. It originates from the Čigota mountain, eastern section of the Zlatibor mountain. The river originally flows northward, next to the villages of Vodice and Jokina Ćuprija, reaches the central section of the Zlatibor where it is dammed and creates the artificial Ribnica lake (surface area of 10 km²), after the nearby village of Ribnica. After the lake, the river sharply turns west and soon gets followed by the parallel stream of the \"Jablanica\" river. After crossing the village of Mokra Gora", "id": "11540154" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\n25 km long. Jablanica originates on the eastern slopes of the Jablanik mountain, just few kilometers away from Obnica. It curves around Parač mountain and next to the village of Balinović, before it meets Obnica in Valjevo. Jablanica is 21.5 km long. This is also the beginning of the long region of the Kolubara valley, divided in two large parts, referred to as Upper (\"gornja\") Kolubara and Lower (\"donja\") Kolubara (around the Belgrade's suburb of Obrenovac). At Valjevo, the", "id": "20109583" }, { "contents": "Jablanica District\n\n\nThe Jablanica District (, ) is one of nine administrative districts of Southern and Eastern Serbia. It expands in the south-eastern parts of Serbia. According to the 2011 census results, it has a population of 215,463 inhabitants. The administrative center of the district is the city of Leskovac. The district encompasses the municipalities of: According to the 2011 census results, the Jablanica Distract has a total population of 216,304 inhabitants. Ethnic composition of the Jablanica District: Famous cultural-historic monuments in this District are: the Roman", "id": "13223854" }, { "contents": "Kalna, Crna Trava\n\n\nKalna () is a small village in the Crna Trava municipality of the Jablanica District of Serbia. Kalna village is an old Serbian village, 35 km away from the Crna Trava. It is located between Tumba and Serbian-Bulgarian border, at an altitude of 500 to 1100 m. The total area is rural area of 7285 hectares. The Kalna can be reached from three directions: The road in this way was there since the Turkish rule. It was the shortest connection of Leskovac valley (Dubočica) to Sofia and Constantinople", "id": "11211518" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina-Neretva Canton\n\n\ntook place there during World War II and there is a large museum in Jablanica dedicated to these battles. The Neretva river runs through the cities of Konjic, Jablanica, Mostar and Čapljina before it flows through Croatia and into the Adriatic Sea. There are large lakes in the canton such as the Jablanica lake located around the city Jablanica. The southern most municipality in the canton is the Neum municipality which borders the Adriatic sea and the eastern most municipality is the Ravno municipality along the border with Croatia. Of the ten cantons comprising", "id": "3225485" }, { "contents": "Vardar Corps\n\n\nThe Vardar Corps was a corps of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland (JVuO) that operated on the left bank of the river Vardar during the World War II in Yugoslavia on the territory of modern-day North Macedonia and southern Serbia. Its commander was former Captain of the Royal Guard of the Royal Yugoslav Army Stojan Krstić. It consisted of four brigades with total number of 1,000 soldiers. Together with Jablanica Corps, South Morava Corps and Flying Corps it belonged under \"Mountain Staff 110\" () located in Sijarinska Banja", "id": "11325997" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nthe villages of Mitrovo Polje, Bzenica, Pleš, Jablanica, Grčak, Toskići, Budilovina and Milentija. When the Rasina reaches the small town of Brus, it enters the upper Rasina region and continues next to the villages of Tršanovci, Lepenac and Razbojna. At this point the river reaches the western side of the Veliki Jastrebac mountain, and makes a wide, elbow turn to the north. In this part of the course, the Rasina also makes a southeast border of the Aleksandrovačka Župa region. After the villages of Bogiše", "id": "209717" }, { "contents": "Doljanka\n\n\nDoljanka is a right tributary of Neretva river in North Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The length of Doljanka is around 18 km and reaches an altitude drop of about 400 m. Arises from sources scattered type under the far northeast slopes of Vran mountain on altitude of 1324 m. It runs through limestone canyon, which is high up to 1,200 m and flows through the village of Doljani. Doljanka flows into the Neretva River between Jablanica and Mostar, at an altitude of 300 m. It is also the connection over which trouts from the Neretva", "id": "8874715" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nValley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Albanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje", "id": "17667163" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n. The Neretva then flows northwest, through Konjic. It enters the Jablanica Reservoir (\"Jablaničko jezero\"), one of the largest in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake ends near the town of Jablanica. From here on, the Neretva turns southward, continuing to the Adriatic Sea. With the mountains lining its shores gradually receding, the Neretva enters a valley where the city of Mostar lies. It flows under the old bridge (\"Stari most\") and continues, now wider, toward the town of Čapljina and", "id": "3021139" }, { "contents": "Radan (mountain)\n\n\nRadan (Serbian Cyrillic: Радан) is a mountain in southern Serbia, near the town of Kuršumlija. Its highest peak, Šopot, has an elevation of 1,408 meters above sea level. Radan separates the valleys of the Toplica and Jablanica rivers. It is well covered with deciduous and evergreen forests. The best known spot on Radan is the Devil's Town – a peculiar rock formation consisting of hundreds of mushroom-like posts, located on its southern slopes. Near the Devil's Town there are ruins of Ivanova kula –", "id": "3957176" }, { "contents": "Crni Timok\n\n\nкотлина, \"depression of Crna Reka\"), populated with many smaller villages (Lukovo, Jablanica, Valakonje, Savinac, Gamzigrad, Zvezdan). At Gamzigrad there is also an important archeological site from Roman times. After a flow of 84 km, the Crni Timok reaches Zaječar, where it joins the Beli Timok River, forming the Veliki Timok River. It drains an area of . Early in its course it receives from the right the Radovanska, Suva, Velika, Salešča, Šarbanovačka, Jasenova, Bajnska and Suva", "id": "11459489" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (mountain range)\n\n\nJablanica ( ; ) is a mountain range in Southern and Southeastern Europe, stretching north-south direction across the border of Albania and the Republic of North Macedonia. The long mountain ridge is higher than for approximately , while the highest part, located in its very center, is Black Stone at high. Both countries have 50% of the mountain, Albania the west and North Macedonia the east. Jablanica Mountain contains many large mountain lakes. Shebenik mountain is located just to the west of Jablanica and give name to the Shebenik", "id": "3232652" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nThe Vlasina (Serbian Cyrillic: Власина), is a river in southeastern Serbia, a 70 km-long outflow of the Vlasina Lake and a right tributary to the Južna Morava, which also gives its name to the surrounding Vlasina region. The Vlasina flows out from the Vlasina Lake at an altitude of 1,213 m. Lake used to be a large, muddy peat bog, but in 1947-51 the Vlasina was dammed by the long, earth dam and the bog was turned into an artificial lake. The river flows to", "id": "14981330" }, { "contents": "Desná (Morava)\n\n\nDesná () is a river situated in Olomouc region of Czech republic, left tributary of the Morava. It is 43.4 km long, and its basin area is 338 km. The Desná river originates at the confluence of Hučivá Desná and Divoká Desná in Kouty nad Desnou, the village situated in deep valley of High Ash Mountains. The Desná then goes southwest through a valley toward the town of Šumperk. After approximately 43.4 km, the Desná flows into the Morava river near Postřelmov village.The mean annual discharge at its mouth", "id": "20977814" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nSerbian forces then headed south into the Morava valley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Muslims fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Turks fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Muslims departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessalonika. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in", "id": "1099566" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n, in the center of the region. Other larger towns include Trebinje, Stolac, Široki Brijeg, Posušje, Ljubuški, Grude, Konjic, and Čapljina. Borders between Herzegovina and Bosnia are unclear and often disputed. The upper flow of the Neretva River lies in northern Herzegovina, a heavily forested area with fast-flowing rivers and high mountains. Konjic and Jablanica lie in this area. The Neretva rises on Lebršnik Mountain, close to the Montenegro border, and as the river flows west, it enters Herzegovina. The entire", "id": "3021137" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nUpper Neretva, of the Neretva river from its source at 1,227 m.a.s.l. and headwaters gorge all the way to the town of Konjic is 90 km, flows from south to north - north-west as most of the Bosnia and Herzegovina rivers belonging to the Danube watershed, and cover some 1,390 km with average elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva briefly expanding into a wide valley which provides fertile agricultural land. There exists a large Jablaničko Lake, artificially formed after construction of dam near Jablanica. \"Second", "id": "16797216" }, { "contents": "Kubršnica\n\n\nThe Kubršnica (Serbian Cyrillic: Кубршница) is a river in Šumadija region of central Serbia, a 42 km-long left and the longest tributary to the Jasenica river. The Kubršnica originates from the Venčac mountain, in the Jasenica sub-region of Šumadija, in the wider area of the town of Aranđelovac. The terrain in the source area of the river is rich in marble and fireclay. The river flows to the east, next to the Aranđelovac's suburb of Banja and turns north near Topola. After the villages", "id": "5629731" }, { "contents": "Peć Bistrica\n\n\nkm-long, Rugovo glacier. The gorge is sparsely inhabited (the village of Mali Štupelj). As it comes out of the gorge, the Peć Bistrica reaches the town of Peć and enters the bottom of the Metohija depression through which it flows for the rest of its course. It runs parallel to the flows of the White Drin to the north and the Dečanska Bistrica to the south, next to the villages of Goraždevac, Lješane, Jablanica, Drenovce and Zaimovo, before it empties into the White Drin south of", "id": "15886949" }, { "contents": "Zlatibor\n\n\nsylvestris\" var. \"zlatiborica\" is a subspecies of pine originating from the mountain, and is endangered today. A hill by the name of Cigla\",\" located near the nearby village of Jablanica, still has some borderline markings of the Kingdom of Serbia, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Zlatibor itself is located in the northern part of the Stari Vlah region, a historical border region between Raška, Herzegovina and Bosnia. It spreads over an area of , in length, southeast to northwest, and up", "id": "3906304" }, { "contents": "Serbian Christmas traditions\n\n\nhousehold. The members of the group were called \"koledari\". The \"koleda\" was carried out from the Feast of Saint Ignatius Theophorus (five days before Christmas) up until the Epiphany. This custom was best preserved in the upper Pčinja District, and in the region around the River South Morava in the Jablanica District, southeastern Serbia. Regarded as pagan and discouraged by the Serbian Orthodox Church, the \"koleda\" ceased to be performed among most of the Serbs during the 19th and 20th centuries. \"Koledari\"", "id": "20573743" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwere designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of Medveđa have small numbers of Albanians and their descendants remained. This was due to a local Ottoman Albanian commander Shahid Pasha from the Jablanica area negotiating on good terms with Prince Milan and thereby guaranteeing their presence. Some other Albanians such as merchants attempted to remain in Niš, but they left after murders occurred and their property was sold off at low values. In 1879, some Albanian refugees from", "id": "1099570" }, { "contents": "Kosovo Pomoravlje\n\n\nThe region's largest cities are Gjilan and Bujanovac. The region is known as \"Kosovsko Pomoravlje\" (Косовско Поморавље, \"Morava Valley of Kosovo\") in Serbian and as Lugina e Anamoraves Binçes (\"Valley of Binač Morava\") in Albanian. Its name is derived from the Binač Morava River, which flows through northern Macedonia, eastern Kosovo and southern Serbia as part of the Great Morava river system. The region includes part of the valley and the Karadak and Koznik mountains. Gjilan has six municipalities and 287 smaller", "id": "13339352" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nAlbanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje, with the intention of then turning west and", "id": "17667142" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\nThe Resavčina (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресавчина) is a river in Serbia, a 32 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. It is sometimes also called \"Resavica\" or \"Resava\" (not to be confused with another Velika Morava's right tributary of Resava or its own tributary of Resavica). The Resavčina originates near the village of Proštinac in Svilajnac municipality. The river originally flows to the north, but soon turns west at the village of Dubnica and enters the western half of the Veliko Pomoravlje region", "id": "4886222" }, { "contents": "Ibar (river)\n\n\nThe Ibar, also known as the Ibër and Ibri (, , ), is a river that flows through eastern Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, with a total length of . The river begins in the Hajla mountain, in Rožaje, eastern Montenegro, and passes through Kosovo to flow into the West Morava river near Kraljevo, central Serbia. It belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area is , with an average discharge of 60 m³/s at the mouth. It is not navigable. The Ibar originates from", "id": "4536148" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Ilirska Bistrica\n\n\nJablanica (; ) is a settlement southeast of Ilirska Bistrica in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. Jablanica is the site of three known mass graves or unmarked graves from the end of the Second World War. They all contain the remains of German soldiers from the 97th Corps that were killed at the beginning of May 1945. The Mountain Fields Mass Grave (), also known as the Mountain Mass Grave (), lies in a meadow about 1.6 km northeast of Jablanica and contains the remains of 10 soldiers. The Solne Mass", "id": "16911511" }, { "contents": "Čezsoča\n\n\nČezsoča (; ) is a settlement in the Municipality of Bovec in the Littoral region of Slovenia. It includes the hamlets of Gorenja Vas (), Dolenja Vas (), Jablanica, Kršovec, and Na Glavi. Čezsoča lies in the valley on the left bank of the Soča River. The terrain then rises up towards Mount Polovnik (1,480 m). East of the settlement is Humčič Hill (810 m), behind which rises Mount Javoršček (1,557 m). Oplenk Creek flows through the village between Gorenja Vas and", "id": "14920585" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nJablanica, the Neretva enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching in depth. Three hydroelectric dams operate between Jablanica and Mostar. When the Neretva expands for the second and final time, it reaches its third section. This area is often colloquially called the \"\"Bosnian and Herzegovinian California\"\". The last of its course forms wide alluvial delta, before the river empties into the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Tatinac (also known as the", "id": "12890344" }, { "contents": "Jablaničko lake\n\n\nJablaničko lake () is a large artificially formed lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva briefly expands into a wide valley. River provided lot of fertile, agricultural land there, before lake flooded most of it. The lake was created in 1953 after construction of Jablanica Dam near Jablanica in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake has an irregular elongated shape. Its width varies along its length. The lake is a popular vacation destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Swimming, boating and especially fishing are popular activities", "id": "13828307" }, { "contents": "Jablanica Dam\n\n\nThe Jablanica Dam is an arch-gravity dam on the Neretva River about northeast of Jablanica in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The dam was constructed between 1947 and 1955 with the primary purpose of hydroelectric power production. The power station was commissioned in two stages, from 1955 until 1958. The first generator was commissioned in February 1955. An upgrade in 2008 increased the installed capacity of the power station from 150 MW to 180 MW. The dam's power station is located about to the southeast near Jablanica", "id": "854706" }, { "contents": "Jablanik\n\n\nJablanik (Serbian Cyrillic: Јабланик) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Valjevo. Its highest peak \"Jablanik\" has an elevation of 1,275 meters(10001020_ above sea level. Jablanik is located at the source of the river Jablanica. It is separated from nearby Medvednik mountain by high pass Stolica, while the Debelo Brdo saddle separates it from Povlen in the southeast. The highest peak has the same name as the mountain itself - Jablanik, and is 1,275 m high. The hills around the peak are mainly", "id": "366162" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\nThe Nišava or Nishava (Bulgarian and , ) is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia, a right tributary, and with a length of 218 km also the longest one, of the South Morava. The Nišava originates in western Bulgaria, in the Stara Planina mountains (east of Kom Peak) near the village of Gintsi. Its source is close to the Serbian border. It enters Serbia after 67 km of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries. Because it flows through Gintsi, the upper course of the river is", "id": "9627075" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nAfter Mramorac village, the Jasenica spills over in several parallel flows, which continue until its confluence. After the Pridvorica and Vodice villages (on different arms of the river), the Jasenica reaches the town of Smederevska Palanka, the most populous settlement in its valley. This is also where the Kubršnica, its main tributary, flows into it from the left. The Jasenica then gently bends to the east, flowing into the Great Morava near the village of Veliko Orašje (the southern arm of the river flows through the town", "id": "3481502" }, { "contents": "Gruža (river)\n\n\nThe Gruža (Serbian Cyrillic: Гружа, ) is a river in central Serbia. The river is a 62 km long left tributary to the Zapadna Morava. The Gruža originates in the central part of the Rudnik mountain, right under the mountain's main settlement, the village of Rudnik, northeast of the town of Gornji Milanovac, central Serbia. The river flows south next to the village of Majdan, around the Rudnik mountain into the Takovo region and at the village of Nevade, just few kilometers away from Gornji Milanovac,", "id": "10971320" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\n(hamlet Panjak) on the Serbian-Bosnian border Crni Rzav meets the Jablanica river at the village Gornje Vardište and finally the river Beli Rzav at the village of Donje Vardište. The Rzav continues as the natural extension of the Beli Rzav, but since the Black Rzav is longer, the latter is considered to be the main headstream. It floes between the southernmost part of the Zvijezda mountain (\"Ponos\" peak) from the north and the Suha Gora mountain from the south, next to the villages of Prosjek (and", "id": "11540155" }, { "contents": "Ub (river)\n\n\nThe Ub (Serbian Cyrillic: Уб) is a river in western Serbia, a 57 km-long right and longest tributary to Tamnava river. The Ub originates from the Vlašić mountain in Podgorina region of west Serbia, near the village of Kasapo. From its source to the mouth, the river flows to the east, parallel to the river Tamnava, which it will eventually join. The villages located in the upper section of the river's flow are Družetić, Pambukovica and Čučuge, where the Ub slightly turns to the", "id": "2261401" }, { "contents": "Olomouc Region\n\n\nof the region is situated on the water level of the Morava River near to Kojetín in the Přerov District (190 m above sea level). The Morava river flows through the region and the majority of the region's territory belongs to Morava’s drainage basin. A small northern part of the region belongs to the drainage basin of Odra River, which flows to the Baltic Sea. The Olomouc Region offers a great variety of natural points of interest. Protected landscape area of the Jeseníky mountains offers a number of scenic places such", "id": "11419394" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina\n\n\nJablanica is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is situated on the Neretva river and Jablanica lake. The municipality of Jablanica is a major tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The municipality offer a wide variety of activities. The surrounding mountains such as Plasa, Čvrsnica and Prenj offer both hunting grounds and a variety of hiking trails. One popular hiking destination is \"Hajdučka Vrata\", a natural wonder, the product of wind", "id": "9009264" }, { "contents": "Krupá (Morava)\n\n\nKrupá (German: Graupa Bach) is a creek in Šumperk District, Moravia, left tributary of the Morava. Its length is 19,2 km and its drainage basin covers 112.7 km2. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 4.48 m³/s. The Krupá originates in Czech part of the Śnieżnik Mountains, 400 meters above sea level. The Krupá then goes south toward the town of Staré Město. It flows into the Morava river near Hanušovice town. River keeps its natural character with meanders and original riversides. A river bottom is", "id": "1745557" }, { "contents": "Oskava (river)\n\n\nOskava is a river in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic, left tributary of the Morava river. Its length is 50.3 km and its drainage basin covers 569 km. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 3.53 m/s. The Oskava originates from southeast slope of Kamenná hora in Hrubý Jeseník, 215 meters above sea level. The river is surrounded by woods in upper reaches, flows through hills of Nízký Jeseník in middle reaches and its lower reaches is situated in swampy floodplain of Litovelské Pomoraví Protected Landscape Area.", "id": "8538845" }, { "contents": "Crna Trava\n\n\nCrna Trava ( ) is a village and municipality located in the Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to 2011 census, the population of the village is 434 inhabitants, while population of the municipality is 1,663. This is the smallest by population and poorest municipality in Serbia. Crna Trava is famous for its migrant builders, who are considered the best in the region and are colloquially described as \"building half of Yugoslavia\". The name of the village in Serbian translates to \"Black Grass\". The origin of the name", "id": "18032485" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\n. At the village of Kušiljevo, the river receives the small stream of \"Beljeva\" from the left and turns northward, which is the general direction of its course for the rest of the flow. The river flows parallel to the Velika Morava river as its satellite flow, in the Morava's floodplain, so there are no settlements on the Resavica itself, but several large villages are located in its valley (Porodin, Žabari, Simićevo, Aleksandrovac Požarevački, Vlaški Do, Poljana), all of them located on the", "id": "4886223" }, { "contents": "Lugomir\n\n\nThe Lugomir (Serbian Cyrillic: Лугомир) is a river in central Serbia, a 57 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. The Lugomir originates from two headstreams, the Dulenska reka and the Županjevačka reka. The shorter headstream of Županjevačka reka (Cyrillic: \"Жупањевачка река\") originates from the mountain of Gledićke planine in southern Šumadija region of central Serbia. Its spring is just some 500 m away from the source of Lugomir's another headstream, the Dulenska reka. The river first flows to the east", "id": "5130918" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\ncities in Serbia, 10 km after which the Nišava empties into the Južna Morava. However, with the rapid growth of Niš in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs, the banks of the Nišava are urbanized almost to its mouth. After being divided into districts in 1992, the Nišava District (with Niš as administrative center) is named after the river. The river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area covers 4,086 km, of which about 73% in Serbia, the rest in Bulgaria", "id": "9627077" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nsection\" begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama river between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes a southern course and enter a largest canyons of its course, running through steep slopes of magnificent mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching 800–1200 meters in depth. From here Neretva flows toward the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Jezernica (also Tatinac), the Gornji and Donji Krupac, the Ljuta-Dindolka, the Jesenica, the Bjelimićka Rijeka, the Slatinica, the Račica, the Rakitnica, the Konjička", "id": "16797217" }, { "contents": "Resava (river)\n\n\nThe Resava (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресава) is a river in central Serbia, a 65 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava. It also gives the name to the surrounding Resava region, the Resava Monastery, the coal mines in its valley and a popular tourist destination of Resava Cave. The Resava originates from the Homolje region in eastern Serbia. It springs out at an altitude of 1,100 m and flows westward between the mountains of Beljanica (on the north) and Kučaj (on the south). In its", "id": "15040274" }, { "contents": "A1 motorway (Serbia)\n\n\nJužna Morava river. Southern section (Niš–Leskovac–Vranje–Macedonian border) consists of 128 km that are in service, while additional 26 km are under construction. Construction of southern section has been completed by May 2019, and last sections opened for traffic on 18 May 2019: Highway passes through valley of South Morava, passes west of Niš, by Merošina and Leskovac, and after Grdelica built highway ends. 26 kilometers of highway under construction passes through Grdelica gorge, very difficult terrain. This sections is often considered", "id": "1785427" }, { "contents": "Čivelj\n\n\nČivelj is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in the municipality of Jablanica, Herzegovina-Neretva Canton, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1991, the village had six inhabitants, all of whom were Muslims. In 2013, Čivelj had 10 inhabitants. Tourism is solid. Civelj is placed 8 kilometres from Jablanica and it is placed on Jablanica lake. In lake there are 5 types of fishes including the most popular \"pastrmka\". The village was found in 1911. by local fishermen. Near Civelj", "id": "4645021" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nAlthough these streams are of low outflow, there are also numerous wellsprings rising on both sides of the canyon at the river banks, with high-capacity discharge. Three large hydroelectric power stations operate in this section of the Neretva, between Jablanica and Mostar, namely Grabovica HPP, Salakovac HPP and Mostar HPP. Jablanica lake is a large artificial lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva expands into a wide valley. The river provided fertile, agricultural land before the lake flooded most of it. The lake", "id": "12890353" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nThe Jasenica (Serbian Cyrillic: Јасеница, ) is a river in central Serbia. It is long and is the left tributary of the Great Morava. This river gives the name to the surrounding region. The Jasenica originates from several streams, most notably the Đurinci (Cyrillic: Ђуринци) from Venčac mountain, and the Srebrenica (Cyrillic: Сребреница) from the northern slopes of the Rudnik mountain in central Serbia. At its origin, the river runs through the eastern border of the Kačer region. It flows to the southeast", "id": "3481500" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nin north Skopje, Macedonia. The streams Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is, after passing the Macedonian-Serbian border, known as the Binačka Morava. After 49 km it meets the Preševska Moravica at Bujanovac, and for the remainder, 246 km, flows as the South Morava. The South Morava belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and its own drainage area is 15,696 km², of which 1,237 km² is in Bulgaria (through its right tributary Nišava). Its average", "id": "15699472" }, { "contents": "Pešter\n\n\nRivers Uvac, Vapa, Jablanica and Grabovica flow through the plateau. In the geologic past, the field was a large lake, of which only a small Sjenica lake near the village of Tuzinje remained. The soil is mostly karst interspersed with pastures. Economy of the area relies primarily on cattle breeding, chiefly sheep. Pešter is famous for its dairy products, especially the \"Sjenica cheese\" (\"Sjenički sir\"), as well as lamb and prosciutto. The plateau is sparsely populated: most settlements are on the", "id": "16748290" }, { "contents": "Sredačka župa\n\n\nSredačka Župa (; \"county of Sredska\") is a remote geographical region, a valley, in southeastern Kosovo, below the Šar Mountains at the source of the Prizrenska Bistrica. The region, an oval basin, lies below the Šar Mountains, at the source, upper stream of the Prizrenska Bistrica (\"Prizren river\"). South of the region between the Prizren mountains and Koritnik mountain, lies the Gora region. It currently includes Sredska, Pousko, Jablanica, Lokvica, Rečane, Živinjane, Planjane, Nebregošte,", "id": "13372292" }, { "contents": "Binačka Morava\n\n\nBinačka Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Биначка Морава; ) or (\"Mirusha\") is a river which flows in southeastern Kosovo and North Macedonia. It flows generally in the southwest to northeast direction, from Macedonian border to Bujanovac, where, after 49 km, meets Preševska Moravica, to create South Morava. The river begins in the mountain of Skopska Crna Gora, in North Macedonia, north of its capital Skopje. Streams of Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is,", "id": "12867615" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwar, the Albanian population depending on the area reacted differently to incoming Serbian forces by either offering resistance or fleeing toward nearby mountains and Ottoman Kosovo. Although most of these Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces, a small presence was allowed to remain in the Jablanica valley where their descendants live today. Serbs from Lab moved to Serbia during and after the first round of hostilities in 1876, while incoming Albanian refugees thereafter 1878 repopulated their villages. Albanian refugees also settled alongside the north-eastern Ottoman-Serbian border, in urban areas", "id": "1099553" }, { "contents": "Banjska River\n\n\nThe Banjska River ( / \"Banjska reka\", \"Baths River\"), is a river in southern Serbia, the right tributary of Toplica in which it flows near Kuršumlija. It rises under the far south-eastern branch of Kopaonik. It is 22 km long, with a river basin area of 155 km². The average flow at the mouth is 0,7 m³/s. The valley of the river is mostly ravines, while the basin is rich in forest. The Kuršumlija-Kuršumlijska Banja-Prepolac Pass-Podujevo-", "id": "14979528" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nby a catastrophic flood. Then unregulated river Jablanica, swollen after a long rainy period, broke on June 6, spilled out of its banks and caused enormous material damage Lebane. Flood toll was paid and human victims (killed two people). After this tragic event, with financial help, Lebane begins to industrialize faster, and the process of industrialization has caused more versatile and faster development of the city. According to the 2011 census, the municipality has 22,000 inhabitants. The ethnic composition of the municipality: The following table", "id": "17523935" }, { "contents": "Čvrsnica\n\n\nČvrsnica () is a mountain in the Dinarides of Bosnia and Herzegovina, located in northern Herzegovina, most of the mountain is located in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton municipalities of Mostar and Jablanica while the smaller part of the mountain, around 10% is located in the municipality of Posušje. The highest peak (Pločno) is 2228 metres. Čvrsnica is surrounded by the river Neretva from the east (20 km), its tributaries Doljanka (18 km) from the north and Drežanka (19.8 km) from the south,", "id": "6129606" }, { "contents": "Myjava (river)\n\n\nThe Myjava River is a river in western Slovakia and for a small part in the Czech Republic and left tributary of the Morava River. It rises in the White Carpathians near the village of Nová Lhota in Moravia, but crosses the Czech-Slovak border shortly afterwards and flows in a southern direction until the town of Myjava, where it enters the Myjava Hills and turns west. Near Sobotište it flows into the Záhorie Lowland and turns south until the village of Jablonica, turning northwest and from Senica it flows west, passing through", "id": "2099838" }, { "contents": "West Morava\n\n\nSouth and Great Morava's meridian (south-to-north) flow, the West Morava runs in an opposed, latitudinal (west-to-east) direction, dividing the region of Šumadija of the central Serbia from the southern parts of the country. Due to the West Morava's direction, it flows between many mountains, regions and sub-regions: The West Morava river valley, Zapadno Pomoravlje, is economically the most developed of all three Morava river valleys. With the valley of the Ibar, the West", "id": "7786624" }, { "contents": "Ralja (river)\n\n\nThe Ralja () is a river in Šumadija region of Serbia, a 51 km long left tributary to the Jezava, a tributary of the Great Morava river. It also gives its name to the surrounding Šumadija's subregion of Ralja. The Ralja originates from the northern part of the Kosmaj mountain, north of the village of Velika Ivanča, in the Sopot municipality of the City of Belgrade. Almost from the source, the river valley is a route for the Belgrade-Niš railway. At the villages of Popović and Mali", "id": "2491229" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nBovan gorge carved by the river and is very popular local and regional tourist destination, especially among campers and fishermen, but the coastline is not put in order. The river continues to the south, in an inverse flow, and after the villages of Subotinac and Kraljevo, it empties into the Južna Morava at the town of Aleksinac. The lower section used to be a coal mining area too, just like the upper one, but the mines (Aleksinački Rudnik) are closed now. The Sokobanjska Moravica brlongs to the Black", "id": "1726358" }, { "contents": "Golijska Moravica\n\n\nThe Golijska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Голијска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in western Serbia. With a length of 98 km, it is the longer headstream of the Zapadna Morava (it forms it with the Đetinja), and thus, of the Velika Morava. Its name, Moravica, means \"little Morava\" in Serbian, and it also gives its name to the surrounding region and the modern Moravica District of Serbia. The Golijska Moravica originates from the western slopes of the Golija mountain and flows", "id": "5380325" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\n. The Nišava is not navigable. It is not only the longest tributary of the Južna Morava, but also the largest one in terms of discharge (36 km/s). It has many smaller tributaries, the most important being the Temštica from the right, and the Jerma (or Sukovska reka), Crvena reka, Koritnička reka and Kutinska reka from the left. The Nišava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia: the route follows the valleys of the Morava", "id": "9627078" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nThe Toplica (Serbian Cyrillic: Топлица, ) is a river in southern Serbia. The river is 130 km long and gives its name to the region it flows through, which constitutes most of the modern Toplica District of Serbia. The Toplica originates under the name of \"Duboka\" from the eastern slopes of the Kopaonik mountain, just south of the highest peak, Pančićev vrh. It flows to the southeast, on the western slopes of the Lepa Gora mountain, next to the villages of Merćez, Selova, Žuč,", "id": "19530451" }, { "contents": "Great Morava\n\n\nof the Velika Morava's right tributary Resava). The average discharge of the Velika Morava on its confluence with Danube is 255 m³/s (120 m³/s brought by Zapadna Morava, 100 m³/s by Južna Morava, and 35 m³/s amounted by the Velika Morava itself). Tributaries of the Velika Morava are short, the longest one being the Jasenica (79 km) and others rarely exceeding 50 km. Right tributaries are: Jovanovačka reka, Crnica, Ravanica, Resava and Resavica (or Resavčina). Left tributaries are more numerous,", "id": "2295702" }, { "contents": "Vevčani\n\n\nVevčani () is a village in the Republic of North Macedonia. It is the only settlement and seat of Vevčani Municipality. The village of Vevčani is found in the southwestern range at the foot of the Jablanica mountain range. It is situated from 800 – 950 metres above sea level. The village is located 14 km North-West of the town of Struga. The village is situated near the villages of Oktisi, Velešta, Podgorci, Gorna Belica with the Albanian border to the West of the village. The famous Vevčani", "id": "5042995" } ]
The Jablanica ( Serbian : Јабланица , ) is an river in southern Serbia . A left tributary of the South ( or Južna ) Morava river , it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia 's Jablanica District , with the region contributing about one third of the district 's area . The Jablanica originates from the [START_ENT] Goljak [END_ENT] mountain , near the village of Grbavce , on the administrative border of the Kosovo province . The area is rich in thermal springs , so several spas are located near the river : Stara Banja , Ravna Banja and Sijarina with popular Sijarinska Banja . At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary Čokotinska reka ( Cyrillic : Чокотинска река ) , turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point . The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the and Radan mountains , in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the in Kosovo . The river flows eastward , passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo , before reaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac , part of the depression of Leskovac , which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava . In the region , near Lebane , a famed archeological find of ( Iustiniana Prima ) is located . The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo , Vranovce , Bošnjace , Turekovac and Stopanje , reaches Vinarce , the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac , and turns north . First it flows parallel to the Veternica river , to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje , then parallel to the Južna Morava . After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava . From Pečenjevce , a parallel flow ( canal ) begins , connecting the Jablanica and s , some 15 km to the north . Through Južna Morava , the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin , draining an area of 895 km ² itself . It 's not navigable and has an average discharge of 6 m ³ / s , which in rainy years grows much higher , so the river floods its valley causing lots of material damage . The name of the river , Jablanica , in Serbian means the
3b3baa05-d1cf-4fff-950c-675cf87c0252_river:4
[{"answer": "Goljak", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "10106183", "title": "Goljak"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nreaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac, part of the depression of Leskovac, which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. In the region, near Lebane, a famed archeological find of Caričin grad (\"Iustiniana Prima\") is located. The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo, Vranovce, Bošnjace, Turekovac and Stopanje, reaches Vinarce, the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac", "id": "3481303" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\n, and turns north. First it flows parallel to the Veternica river, to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje, then parallel to the Južna Morava. After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava. From Pečenjevce, a parallel flow (canal) begins, connecting the Jablanica and Toplica rivers, some 15 km to the north. Through Južna Morava, the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, draining an area of itself. It's not navigable", "id": "3481304" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\npopular Sijarinska Banja. At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary \"Čokotinska reka\" (Cyrillic: \"Чокотинска река\"), turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point. The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the Majdan and Radan mountains, in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the District of Priština in Kosovo. The river flows eastward, passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo, before", "id": "3481302" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nThe Jablanica (, ) is an river in southern Serbia. A left tributary of the South (or Južna) Morava river, it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia's Jablanica District, with the region contributing about one third of the district's area. The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain, near the village of Grbavce, on the border with Kosovo. The area is rich in thermal springs, so several spas are located near the river: Stara Banja, Ravna Banja and Sijarina with", "id": "3481301" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nJablanica with third parallel flow, the \"Sušica\", being formed in between. Settlements include many small villages, like Vina, Bukova Gora, Miroševce, Žabljane, Beli Potok and Strojkovce. In the Leskovac field, the river gently turns north, receives the Sušica from the left and reaches the town of Leskovac. The Veternica continues northward, being connected to the Jablanica river by the canal at the village of Bogojevce, before it empties into the Južna Morava. The Veternica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its", "id": "11539775" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nThe Veternica (Serbian Cyrillic: Ветерница, ) is a river in southern Serbia, a 75 km long left tributary to the Južna Morava, which gives the name to the region surrounding its valley. The Veternica originates from the Grot peak, the southernmost part of the Kukavica mountain. Four smaller streams meet at the village of Vlase and continue to the north as the Veternica. The river flows next to the villages of Golemo Selo, Oštra Glava and Gagince, where it flows parallel to the Jablanica river. As the Veternica", "id": "11539773" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nbends to the northeast, it enters the low Veternica region, part of the Leskovac field in the composite valley of the Južna Morava. Small region, located between the Kukavica mountain on the south and the Jablanica region on the north, is divided in two micro-regions, upper one being centered on the small town of Vučje (which is not located on the river itself) while the center of the lower micro-region is the town of Leskovac. As it enters the region, the Veternica furthers away from the", "id": "11539774" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nthe west, Kukavica and Čemernik in the south and Babička Gora, Seličevica and Suva Planina to the east. The largest river in the region of Leskovac is the South Morava River, which flows south to north. Tributaries of the South Morava are: the Vlasina river, which collects water from Lake Vlasina and flows through Crna Trava and Vlasotince; the Veternica river, which flows through Leskovac; the Jablanica river, which springs from the foot of Goljak and flows through Medveđa and Lebane; the Pusta (Deserted) river,", "id": "2857704" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nof 590 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and is not navigable. The region of Pusta Reka mostly correspondence with the river's watershed. It is located between the Pasjača mountain and lower Toplica region (on the north), the Southern Pomoravlje (Field of Leskovac, on the east), the Jablanica region (on the south) and the Radan mountain (on the west). The region is an agricultural area, almost without any industry, except for some smaller facilities in regional center, Bojnik", "id": "12523581" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nof Podina, Voljčince, Badnjevac and the smaller regional center Žitorađa. After the Toplica reaches municipal center of Doljevac, it enters the most densely populated part of the south Pomoravlje, turns north and flows into the Južna Morava at the village of Orljane, across the medieval ruins of Kurvin grad, as Južna Morava's longest left tributary. The Toplica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its own drainage area of 2,217 km². The river is not navigable. The river valley is a major traffic route in southern Serbia as", "id": "19530454" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nThe Sokobanjska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Сокобањска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in central eastern Serbia, a 58 km-long right tributary to the Južna Morava river. The Sokobanjska Moravica originates from the eastern slopes of the Devica mountain, near the village of Skrobnica. The river flows to the north, turns westward at the village of Levovik and enters the Banja region. The rivers flows between the northern slopes of the Devica and Ozren mountains (on the south) and southern slopes of the Rtanj mountain", "id": "1726356" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\nmouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. As the wider Jabllanica region, Medveđa also had an Albanian majority. These Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces in a way that today would be characterized as ethnic cleansing. Due to depopulation and economic considerations some small numbers of Albanians were allowed to stay and return though not to their previous settlements and instead were designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of", "id": "7117787" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\n, a notable Muslim population existed in the districts of Niš, Pirot, Vranje, Leskovac, Prokuplje and Kuršumlija. The rural parts of Toplica, Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the", "id": "1099558" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nthe southernmost slopes of the Suva Planina and Babička Gora mountains, it reaches the town of Vlasotince and western parts of the low Leskovac field, part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. After the villages of Batulovce and Stajkovce, the Vlasina empties into the Južna Morava, east of the Leskovac's eastern suburb of Mrštane. The Vlasina drains an area of 991 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin and it is not navigable. On 26 June 1988, after a period of heavy rains, Vlasina was a", "id": "14981332" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nThe Pusta River ( / \"Pusta reka\", \"Desolate River\") is a river in southern Serbia, a 71-km long left tributary to the South Morava. It also gives the name to the Pusta Reka region in its valley. The river originates northeast of Prolom Banja, near the Sokolovica village, on the northern tip of the Radan mountain, as the \"Golema River\" (\"Big River\"). It flows eastward, between the mountains of Radan (to the south) and Pasjača (to the", "id": "12523579" }, { "contents": "Persecution of Muslims during Ottoman contraction\n\n\nReka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the Turks were of Albanian origin. The Muslims in the cities of Niš and Pirot were Turkish-speaking; Vranje and Leskovac were Turkish- and Albanian-speaking; Prokuplje", "id": "8891598" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nvalley between Konjic and Jablanica, known simply as \"Neretva\" since Middle Ages, the new point for hydrographical division became dam of the Jablanica HPP where also is a place of confluence of the rivers Neretva and Rama. Here the Neretva river suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before it reach town of Jablanica. From this point it turns again toward south and enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes of the mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica", "id": "12890350" }, { "contents": "Rama (Neretva)\n\n\nRama is a river in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a major tributary of the Neretva. It joins it from the right by discharging into Neretva's artificial reservoir, Jablaničko lake, at place called Marina Pećina, near village of Gračac, between location of underground powerhouse of Rama Hydroelectric Power Station and Jablanica Dam, depending on water level in Jablaničko lake, some 15 kilometers upstream from Jablanica. The Rama flows through municipalities of Prozor-Rama and Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, while its headwaters together with wellsprings in the region of", "id": "3052779" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\nThe Kolubara (Serbian Cyrillic: Колубара, ), is a long river in western Serbia; it is an eastern, right tributary to the Sava river. Kolubara is formed by the two small rivers Obnica and Jablanica. \"Obnica\" is the river in Western Serbia that springs at the foot of the mountain Medvednik. It flows to the East, through the villages of Suvodanje, Bobova, Majinović, Pričević and Zlatarić, and at the city of Valjevo meets the river \"Jablanica\" and forms Kolubara. The Obnica is", "id": "20109582" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\ndating to the 4th century AD lay at various locations of the town, as it was a transitory zone of Upper Moesia; travel and postal stations are among the finds. Toponyms such as \"Arbanaška\" and \"Đjake\" shows an Albanian presence in the Toplica and Southern Morava regions (located north-east of contemporary Kosovo) before the expulsion of Albanians during 1877–1878 period. The rural parts of Jablanica valley and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river", "id": "7117786" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\naverage elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva again expands into a third and largest valley which provided fertile agricultural land before it was flooded by large artificial reservoir, Jablaničko Lake, formed after construction of a Jablanica Dam near town of Jablanica. The second section begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before reaches town of Jablanica, from which point turns again toward south. From", "id": "12890343" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nLebane () is a town and municipality located in Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 10,062 inhabitants, while the municipality has 20,000 inhabitants. The town is located at the confluence of the rivers Jablanica and Šumanska Reka, in the alluvial plain created by the former. Just northeast of the town a larger plain called Leskovačko polje extends toward the town of Leskovac, which is the district seat. The elevation of the town of Lebane is between 275.2 and 420 MASL.", "id": "17523929" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nRakic writes about it as a \"\"big village populated by Serbs, in a valley, on the river Jablanica, on its left bank.\"\" Only when Lebane got the role of Jablanica district headquarters, it began to gradually develop in a direction of a small town. The core of this small town was a series of houses along the Jablanica which is 45m wide here (as is even now); at the end of this series are the buildings of the Court and Municipality. The main feature of", "id": "17523931" }, { "contents": "Štulac (Lebane)\n\n\nthe village of Prekopčelica. The village is located on the valley slopes of the Caričin Potok creek. It is scattered between the altitudes of . It is situated in the wider Pusta Reka region. The village rests on the western slopes of the , which here divides the regions of Pusta Reka and Jablanica. On the west, the easternmost slopes of the Radan mountain begin. The village area covers . The Slavs settled in the area in the 7th century, centering around the ruins of Iustiniana Prima. Due to the lack of", "id": "11151840" }, { "contents": "Grdelica\n\n\nGrdelica () is a town in southern Serbia. It is situated in the Leskovac municipality, in the Jablanica District. The total population of the town was 3,194 people as of the 2011 census. For census purposes, Grdelica is divided into two adjacent parts, southern \"Grdelica town\" (\"Grdelica varoš\"; population 2,136) and northern \"Grdelica village\" (\"Grdelica selo\"; 1,058). Grdelica lies at the South Morava river, on the mountainous terrain at the entrance of the Grdelica Gorge. It", "id": "460756" }, { "contents": "Gornji Bučumet\n\n\nall settlements registered separately in the census. The three settlements lie in the South Morava basin, above the Jablanica river, and as such are located in the Upper Jablanica region. The highest mountain in Upper Bučumet is Paramid (853), with the mountain of Sv. Petar (1149) being located in Middle Bučumet. The three neighbourhoods of Bučumet are 470 to 853 metres above sea level. There is a medieval church built on the ruins of an older church. During the Toplica-Jablanica Operation (, ) in", "id": "12752738" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nthe huge floods of its daughter river. The South Morava has 157 tributaries. The most important left tributaries are: Jablanica, Veternica, Pusta reka and Toplica. Right tributaries are: Vrla, Vlasina, Nišava (the longest) and Sokobanjska Moravica. The South Morava has a significant potential for electricity production, and a huge hydroelectrical system (Vlasina- Vrla I-IV power stations) has been constructed in its drainage basin. To a certain extent, its waters are used for irrigation. The river valley's most important role", "id": "15699476" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nThe Rasina () is a river in south central Serbia. The long river flows through the Rasina region, gives its name to the modern Rasina District of Serbia, and flows into the Zapadna Morava near the city of Kruševac. Its historical name is Arsen (Αρσεγα). The Rasina springs from the southern slopes of the Goč mountain, near the village of Rašovka, southwest of the most famous Serbian spa, Vrnjačka Banja. The river originally flows to the southeast, around the mountains of Željin and Kopaonik, next to", "id": "209716" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nLeskovac (Serbian Cyrillic: Лесковац, ) is a city and the administrative center of the Jablanica District in southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the city urban area has 60,288 inhabitants, while the city administrative area has 144,206. Traces of life of the Brnjica culture (8th century BC) is seen at the Hisar Hill (Hisar Leskovac) that was protected by a deep moat with a palisade on its inner side, a fortification similar to that of another fortification on the site near Zlokućane in the Velika Morava basin", "id": "2857693" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nThe favorable location and the richness of nature made Jablanica valley important place since the earliest times. Traffic affordable and fertile, Leskovac valley has provided favorable conditions for the settlement of population. Archaeological findings, of which the most important are Hissar and Caričin grad (Iustiniana Prima) show that life in this area, continuously evolved from prehistoric man to date. First mention of Lebane as Hlebane dates back to 1512. Lebane is formed as a village of the same name after the liberation in 1878. Visiting Serbia in 1880s, M.", "id": "17523930" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nThe South Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Јужна Морава, Serbian Latin: \"Južna Morava\", ; ) is a river in eastern Kosovo and in southern Serbia, which represents the shorter headwater of Great Morava. Today, it is 295 km long, including its source river Binačka Morava. It flows generally in the south to north direction, from Macedonian border to Kosovo and onwards to Central Serbia, where it meets West Morava at Stalać, to create Great Morava. The river rises in the Skopska Crna Gora mountain", "id": "15699471" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\nis the Rzav's longer headstream. It originates from the Čigota mountain, eastern section of the Zlatibor mountain. The river originally flows northward, next to the villages of Vodice and Jokina Ćuprija, reaches the central section of the Zlatibor where it is dammed and creates the artificial Ribnica lake (surface area of 10 km²), after the nearby village of Ribnica. After the lake, the river sharply turns west and soon gets followed by the parallel stream of the \"Jablanica\" river. After crossing the village of Mokra Gora", "id": "11540154" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\n25 km long. Jablanica originates on the eastern slopes of the Jablanik mountain, just few kilometers away from Obnica. It curves around Parač mountain and next to the village of Balinović, before it meets Obnica in Valjevo. Jablanica is 21.5 km long. This is also the beginning of the long region of the Kolubara valley, divided in two large parts, referred to as Upper (\"gornja\") Kolubara and Lower (\"donja\") Kolubara (around the Belgrade's suburb of Obrenovac). At Valjevo, the", "id": "20109583" }, { "contents": "Jablanica District\n\n\nThe Jablanica District (, ) is one of nine administrative districts of Southern and Eastern Serbia. It expands in the south-eastern parts of Serbia. According to the 2011 census results, it has a population of 215,463 inhabitants. The administrative center of the district is the city of Leskovac. The district encompasses the municipalities of: According to the 2011 census results, the Jablanica Distract has a total population of 216,304 inhabitants. Ethnic composition of the Jablanica District: Famous cultural-historic monuments in this District are: the Roman", "id": "13223854" }, { "contents": "Kalna, Crna Trava\n\n\nKalna () is a small village in the Crna Trava municipality of the Jablanica District of Serbia. Kalna village is an old Serbian village, 35 km away from the Crna Trava. It is located between Tumba and Serbian-Bulgarian border, at an altitude of 500 to 1100 m. The total area is rural area of 7285 hectares. The Kalna can be reached from three directions: The road in this way was there since the Turkish rule. It was the shortest connection of Leskovac valley (Dubočica) to Sofia and Constantinople", "id": "11211518" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina-Neretva Canton\n\n\ntook place there during World War II and there is a large museum in Jablanica dedicated to these battles. The Neretva river runs through the cities of Konjic, Jablanica, Mostar and Čapljina before it flows through Croatia and into the Adriatic Sea. There are large lakes in the canton such as the Jablanica lake located around the city Jablanica. The southern most municipality in the canton is the Neum municipality which borders the Adriatic sea and the eastern most municipality is the Ravno municipality along the border with Croatia. Of the ten cantons comprising", "id": "3225485" }, { "contents": "Vardar Corps\n\n\nThe Vardar Corps was a corps of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland (JVuO) that operated on the left bank of the river Vardar during the World War II in Yugoslavia on the territory of modern-day North Macedonia and southern Serbia. Its commander was former Captain of the Royal Guard of the Royal Yugoslav Army Stojan Krstić. It consisted of four brigades with total number of 1,000 soldiers. Together with Jablanica Corps, South Morava Corps and Flying Corps it belonged under \"Mountain Staff 110\" () located in Sijarinska Banja", "id": "11325997" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nthe villages of Mitrovo Polje, Bzenica, Pleš, Jablanica, Grčak, Toskići, Budilovina and Milentija. When the Rasina reaches the small town of Brus, it enters the upper Rasina region and continues next to the villages of Tršanovci, Lepenac and Razbojna. At this point the river reaches the western side of the Veliki Jastrebac mountain, and makes a wide, elbow turn to the north. In this part of the course, the Rasina also makes a southeast border of the Aleksandrovačka Župa region. After the villages of Bogiše", "id": "209717" }, { "contents": "Doljanka\n\n\nDoljanka is a right tributary of Neretva river in North Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The length of Doljanka is around 18 km and reaches an altitude drop of about 400 m. Arises from sources scattered type under the far northeast slopes of Vran mountain on altitude of 1324 m. It runs through limestone canyon, which is high up to 1,200 m and flows through the village of Doljani. Doljanka flows into the Neretva River between Jablanica and Mostar, at an altitude of 300 m. It is also the connection over which trouts from the Neretva", "id": "8874715" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nValley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Albanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje", "id": "17667163" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n. The Neretva then flows northwest, through Konjic. It enters the Jablanica Reservoir (\"Jablaničko jezero\"), one of the largest in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake ends near the town of Jablanica. From here on, the Neretva turns southward, continuing to the Adriatic Sea. With the mountains lining its shores gradually receding, the Neretva enters a valley where the city of Mostar lies. It flows under the old bridge (\"Stari most\") and continues, now wider, toward the town of Čapljina and", "id": "3021139" }, { "contents": "Radan (mountain)\n\n\nRadan (Serbian Cyrillic: Радан) is a mountain in southern Serbia, near the town of Kuršumlija. Its highest peak, Šopot, has an elevation of 1,408 meters above sea level. Radan separates the valleys of the Toplica and Jablanica rivers. It is well covered with deciduous and evergreen forests. The best known spot on Radan is the Devil's Town – a peculiar rock formation consisting of hundreds of mushroom-like posts, located on its southern slopes. Near the Devil's Town there are ruins of Ivanova kula –", "id": "3957176" }, { "contents": "Crni Timok\n\n\nкотлина, \"depression of Crna Reka\"), populated with many smaller villages (Lukovo, Jablanica, Valakonje, Savinac, Gamzigrad, Zvezdan). At Gamzigrad there is also an important archeological site from Roman times. After a flow of 84 km, the Crni Timok reaches Zaječar, where it joins the Beli Timok River, forming the Veliki Timok River. It drains an area of . Early in its course it receives from the right the Radovanska, Suva, Velika, Salešča, Šarbanovačka, Jasenova, Bajnska and Suva", "id": "11459489" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (mountain range)\n\n\nJablanica ( ; ) is a mountain range in Southern and Southeastern Europe, stretching north-south direction across the border of Albania and the Republic of North Macedonia. The long mountain ridge is higher than for approximately , while the highest part, located in its very center, is Black Stone at high. Both countries have 50% of the mountain, Albania the west and North Macedonia the east. Jablanica Mountain contains many large mountain lakes. Shebenik mountain is located just to the west of Jablanica and give name to the Shebenik", "id": "3232652" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nThe Vlasina (Serbian Cyrillic: Власина), is a river in southeastern Serbia, a 70 km-long outflow of the Vlasina Lake and a right tributary to the Južna Morava, which also gives its name to the surrounding Vlasina region. The Vlasina flows out from the Vlasina Lake at an altitude of 1,213 m. Lake used to be a large, muddy peat bog, but in 1947-51 the Vlasina was dammed by the long, earth dam and the bog was turned into an artificial lake. The river flows to", "id": "14981330" }, { "contents": "Desná (Morava)\n\n\nDesná () is a river situated in Olomouc region of Czech republic, left tributary of the Morava. It is 43.4 km long, and its basin area is 338 km. The Desná river originates at the confluence of Hučivá Desná and Divoká Desná in Kouty nad Desnou, the village situated in deep valley of High Ash Mountains. The Desná then goes southwest through a valley toward the town of Šumperk. After approximately 43.4 km, the Desná flows into the Morava river near Postřelmov village.The mean annual discharge at its mouth", "id": "20977814" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nSerbian forces then headed south into the Morava valley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Muslims fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Turks fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Muslims departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessalonika. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in", "id": "1099566" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n, in the center of the region. Other larger towns include Trebinje, Stolac, Široki Brijeg, Posušje, Ljubuški, Grude, Konjic, and Čapljina. Borders between Herzegovina and Bosnia are unclear and often disputed. The upper flow of the Neretva River lies in northern Herzegovina, a heavily forested area with fast-flowing rivers and high mountains. Konjic and Jablanica lie in this area. The Neretva rises on Lebršnik Mountain, close to the Montenegro border, and as the river flows west, it enters Herzegovina. The entire", "id": "3021137" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nUpper Neretva, of the Neretva river from its source at 1,227 m.a.s.l. and headwaters gorge all the way to the town of Konjic is 90 km, flows from south to north - north-west as most of the Bosnia and Herzegovina rivers belonging to the Danube watershed, and cover some 1,390 km with average elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva briefly expanding into a wide valley which provides fertile agricultural land. There exists a large Jablaničko Lake, artificially formed after construction of dam near Jablanica. \"Second", "id": "16797216" }, { "contents": "Kubršnica\n\n\nThe Kubršnica (Serbian Cyrillic: Кубршница) is a river in Šumadija region of central Serbia, a 42 km-long left and the longest tributary to the Jasenica river. The Kubršnica originates from the Venčac mountain, in the Jasenica sub-region of Šumadija, in the wider area of the town of Aranđelovac. The terrain in the source area of the river is rich in marble and fireclay. The river flows to the east, next to the Aranđelovac's suburb of Banja and turns north near Topola. After the villages", "id": "5629731" }, { "contents": "Peć Bistrica\n\n\nkm-long, Rugovo glacier. The gorge is sparsely inhabited (the village of Mali Štupelj). As it comes out of the gorge, the Peć Bistrica reaches the town of Peć and enters the bottom of the Metohija depression through which it flows for the rest of its course. It runs parallel to the flows of the White Drin to the north and the Dečanska Bistrica to the south, next to the villages of Goraždevac, Lješane, Jablanica, Drenovce and Zaimovo, before it empties into the White Drin south of", "id": "15886949" }, { "contents": "Zlatibor\n\n\nsylvestris\" var. \"zlatiborica\" is a subspecies of pine originating from the mountain, and is endangered today. A hill by the name of Cigla\",\" located near the nearby village of Jablanica, still has some borderline markings of the Kingdom of Serbia, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Zlatibor itself is located in the northern part of the Stari Vlah region, a historical border region between Raška, Herzegovina and Bosnia. It spreads over an area of , in length, southeast to northwest, and up", "id": "3906304" }, { "contents": "Serbian Christmas traditions\n\n\nhousehold. The members of the group were called \"koledari\". The \"koleda\" was carried out from the Feast of Saint Ignatius Theophorus (five days before Christmas) up until the Epiphany. This custom was best preserved in the upper Pčinja District, and in the region around the River South Morava in the Jablanica District, southeastern Serbia. Regarded as pagan and discouraged by the Serbian Orthodox Church, the \"koleda\" ceased to be performed among most of the Serbs during the 19th and 20th centuries. \"Koledari\"", "id": "20573743" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwere designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of Medveđa have small numbers of Albanians and their descendants remained. This was due to a local Ottoman Albanian commander Shahid Pasha from the Jablanica area negotiating on good terms with Prince Milan and thereby guaranteeing their presence. Some other Albanians such as merchants attempted to remain in Niš, but they left after murders occurred and their property was sold off at low values. In 1879, some Albanian refugees from", "id": "1099570" }, { "contents": "Kosovo Pomoravlje\n\n\nThe region's largest cities are Gjilan and Bujanovac. The region is known as \"Kosovsko Pomoravlje\" (Косовско Поморавље, \"Morava Valley of Kosovo\") in Serbian and as Lugina e Anamoraves Binçes (\"Valley of Binač Morava\") in Albanian. Its name is derived from the Binač Morava River, which flows through northern Macedonia, eastern Kosovo and southern Serbia as part of the Great Morava river system. The region includes part of the valley and the Karadak and Koznik mountains. Gjilan has six municipalities and 287 smaller", "id": "13339352" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nAlbanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje, with the intention of then turning west and", "id": "17667142" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\nThe Resavčina (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресавчина) is a river in Serbia, a 32 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. It is sometimes also called \"Resavica\" or \"Resava\" (not to be confused with another Velika Morava's right tributary of Resava or its own tributary of Resavica). The Resavčina originates near the village of Proštinac in Svilajnac municipality. The river originally flows to the north, but soon turns west at the village of Dubnica and enters the western half of the Veliko Pomoravlje region", "id": "4886222" }, { "contents": "Ibar (river)\n\n\nThe Ibar, also known as the Ibër and Ibri (, , ), is a river that flows through eastern Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, with a total length of . The river begins in the Hajla mountain, in Rožaje, eastern Montenegro, and passes through Kosovo to flow into the West Morava river near Kraljevo, central Serbia. It belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area is , with an average discharge of 60 m³/s at the mouth. It is not navigable. The Ibar originates from", "id": "4536148" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Ilirska Bistrica\n\n\nJablanica (; ) is a settlement southeast of Ilirska Bistrica in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. Jablanica is the site of three known mass graves or unmarked graves from the end of the Second World War. They all contain the remains of German soldiers from the 97th Corps that were killed at the beginning of May 1945. The Mountain Fields Mass Grave (), also known as the Mountain Mass Grave (), lies in a meadow about 1.6 km northeast of Jablanica and contains the remains of 10 soldiers. The Solne Mass", "id": "16911511" }, { "contents": "Čezsoča\n\n\nČezsoča (; ) is a settlement in the Municipality of Bovec in the Littoral region of Slovenia. It includes the hamlets of Gorenja Vas (), Dolenja Vas (), Jablanica, Kršovec, and Na Glavi. Čezsoča lies in the valley on the left bank of the Soča River. The terrain then rises up towards Mount Polovnik (1,480 m). East of the settlement is Humčič Hill (810 m), behind which rises Mount Javoršček (1,557 m). Oplenk Creek flows through the village between Gorenja Vas and", "id": "14920585" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nJablanica, the Neretva enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching in depth. Three hydroelectric dams operate between Jablanica and Mostar. When the Neretva expands for the second and final time, it reaches its third section. This area is often colloquially called the \"\"Bosnian and Herzegovinian California\"\". The last of its course forms wide alluvial delta, before the river empties into the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Tatinac (also known as the", "id": "12890344" }, { "contents": "Jablaničko lake\n\n\nJablaničko lake () is a large artificially formed lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva briefly expands into a wide valley. River provided lot of fertile, agricultural land there, before lake flooded most of it. The lake was created in 1953 after construction of Jablanica Dam near Jablanica in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake has an irregular elongated shape. Its width varies along its length. The lake is a popular vacation destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Swimming, boating and especially fishing are popular activities", "id": "13828307" }, { "contents": "Jablanica Dam\n\n\nThe Jablanica Dam is an arch-gravity dam on the Neretva River about northeast of Jablanica in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The dam was constructed between 1947 and 1955 with the primary purpose of hydroelectric power production. The power station was commissioned in two stages, from 1955 until 1958. The first generator was commissioned in February 1955. An upgrade in 2008 increased the installed capacity of the power station from 150 MW to 180 MW. The dam's power station is located about to the southeast near Jablanica", "id": "854706" }, { "contents": "Jablanik\n\n\nJablanik (Serbian Cyrillic: Јабланик) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Valjevo. Its highest peak \"Jablanik\" has an elevation of 1,275 meters(10001020_ above sea level. Jablanik is located at the source of the river Jablanica. It is separated from nearby Medvednik mountain by high pass Stolica, while the Debelo Brdo saddle separates it from Povlen in the southeast. The highest peak has the same name as the mountain itself - Jablanik, and is 1,275 m high. The hills around the peak are mainly", "id": "366162" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\nThe Nišava or Nishava (Bulgarian and , ) is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia, a right tributary, and with a length of 218 km also the longest one, of the South Morava. The Nišava originates in western Bulgaria, in the Stara Planina mountains (east of Kom Peak) near the village of Gintsi. Its source is close to the Serbian border. It enters Serbia after 67 km of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries. Because it flows through Gintsi, the upper course of the river is", "id": "9627075" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nAfter Mramorac village, the Jasenica spills over in several parallel flows, which continue until its confluence. After the Pridvorica and Vodice villages (on different arms of the river), the Jasenica reaches the town of Smederevska Palanka, the most populous settlement in its valley. This is also where the Kubršnica, its main tributary, flows into it from the left. The Jasenica then gently bends to the east, flowing into the Great Morava near the village of Veliko Orašje (the southern arm of the river flows through the town", "id": "3481502" }, { "contents": "Gruža (river)\n\n\nThe Gruža (Serbian Cyrillic: Гружа, ) is a river in central Serbia. The river is a 62 km long left tributary to the Zapadna Morava. The Gruža originates in the central part of the Rudnik mountain, right under the mountain's main settlement, the village of Rudnik, northeast of the town of Gornji Milanovac, central Serbia. The river flows south next to the village of Majdan, around the Rudnik mountain into the Takovo region and at the village of Nevade, just few kilometers away from Gornji Milanovac,", "id": "10971320" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\n(hamlet Panjak) on the Serbian-Bosnian border Crni Rzav meets the Jablanica river at the village Gornje Vardište and finally the river Beli Rzav at the village of Donje Vardište. The Rzav continues as the natural extension of the Beli Rzav, but since the Black Rzav is longer, the latter is considered to be the main headstream. It floes between the southernmost part of the Zvijezda mountain (\"Ponos\" peak) from the north and the Suha Gora mountain from the south, next to the villages of Prosjek (and", "id": "11540155" }, { "contents": "Ub (river)\n\n\nThe Ub (Serbian Cyrillic: Уб) is a river in western Serbia, a 57 km-long right and longest tributary to Tamnava river. The Ub originates from the Vlašić mountain in Podgorina region of west Serbia, near the village of Kasapo. From its source to the mouth, the river flows to the east, parallel to the river Tamnava, which it will eventually join. The villages located in the upper section of the river's flow are Družetić, Pambukovica and Čučuge, where the Ub slightly turns to the", "id": "2261401" }, { "contents": "Olomouc Region\n\n\nof the region is situated on the water level of the Morava River near to Kojetín in the Přerov District (190 m above sea level). The Morava river flows through the region and the majority of the region's territory belongs to Morava’s drainage basin. A small northern part of the region belongs to the drainage basin of Odra River, which flows to the Baltic Sea. The Olomouc Region offers a great variety of natural points of interest. Protected landscape area of the Jeseníky mountains offers a number of scenic places such", "id": "11419394" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina\n\n\nJablanica is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is situated on the Neretva river and Jablanica lake. The municipality of Jablanica is a major tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The municipality offer a wide variety of activities. The surrounding mountains such as Plasa, Čvrsnica and Prenj offer both hunting grounds and a variety of hiking trails. One popular hiking destination is \"Hajdučka Vrata\", a natural wonder, the product of wind", "id": "9009264" }, { "contents": "Krupá (Morava)\n\n\nKrupá (German: Graupa Bach) is a creek in Šumperk District, Moravia, left tributary of the Morava. Its length is 19,2 km and its drainage basin covers 112.7 km2. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 4.48 m³/s. The Krupá originates in Czech part of the Śnieżnik Mountains, 400 meters above sea level. The Krupá then goes south toward the town of Staré Město. It flows into the Morava river near Hanušovice town. River keeps its natural character with meanders and original riversides. A river bottom is", "id": "1745557" }, { "contents": "Oskava (river)\n\n\nOskava is a river in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic, left tributary of the Morava river. Its length is 50.3 km and its drainage basin covers 569 km. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 3.53 m/s. The Oskava originates from southeast slope of Kamenná hora in Hrubý Jeseník, 215 meters above sea level. The river is surrounded by woods in upper reaches, flows through hills of Nízký Jeseník in middle reaches and its lower reaches is situated in swampy floodplain of Litovelské Pomoraví Protected Landscape Area.", "id": "8538845" }, { "contents": "Crna Trava\n\n\nCrna Trava ( ) is a village and municipality located in the Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to 2011 census, the population of the village is 434 inhabitants, while population of the municipality is 1,663. This is the smallest by population and poorest municipality in Serbia. Crna Trava is famous for its migrant builders, who are considered the best in the region and are colloquially described as \"building half of Yugoslavia\". The name of the village in Serbian translates to \"Black Grass\". The origin of the name", "id": "18032485" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\n. At the village of Kušiljevo, the river receives the small stream of \"Beljeva\" from the left and turns northward, which is the general direction of its course for the rest of the flow. The river flows parallel to the Velika Morava river as its satellite flow, in the Morava's floodplain, so there are no settlements on the Resavica itself, but several large villages are located in its valley (Porodin, Žabari, Simićevo, Aleksandrovac Požarevački, Vlaški Do, Poljana), all of them located on the", "id": "4886223" }, { "contents": "Lugomir\n\n\nThe Lugomir (Serbian Cyrillic: Лугомир) is a river in central Serbia, a 57 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. The Lugomir originates from two headstreams, the Dulenska reka and the Županjevačka reka. The shorter headstream of Županjevačka reka (Cyrillic: \"Жупањевачка река\") originates from the mountain of Gledićke planine in southern Šumadija region of central Serbia. Its spring is just some 500 m away from the source of Lugomir's another headstream, the Dulenska reka. The river first flows to the east", "id": "5130918" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\ncities in Serbia, 10 km after which the Nišava empties into the Južna Morava. However, with the rapid growth of Niš in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs, the banks of the Nišava are urbanized almost to its mouth. After being divided into districts in 1992, the Nišava District (with Niš as administrative center) is named after the river. The river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area covers 4,086 km, of which about 73% in Serbia, the rest in Bulgaria", "id": "9627077" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nsection\" begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama river between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes a southern course and enter a largest canyons of its course, running through steep slopes of magnificent mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching 800–1200 meters in depth. From here Neretva flows toward the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Jezernica (also Tatinac), the Gornji and Donji Krupac, the Ljuta-Dindolka, the Jesenica, the Bjelimićka Rijeka, the Slatinica, the Račica, the Rakitnica, the Konjička", "id": "16797217" }, { "contents": "Resava (river)\n\n\nThe Resava (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресава) is a river in central Serbia, a 65 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava. It also gives the name to the surrounding Resava region, the Resava Monastery, the coal mines in its valley and a popular tourist destination of Resava Cave. The Resava originates from the Homolje region in eastern Serbia. It springs out at an altitude of 1,100 m and flows westward between the mountains of Beljanica (on the north) and Kučaj (on the south). In its", "id": "15040274" }, { "contents": "A1 motorway (Serbia)\n\n\nJužna Morava river. Southern section (Niš–Leskovac–Vranje–Macedonian border) consists of 128 km that are in service, while additional 26 km are under construction. Construction of southern section has been completed by May 2019, and last sections opened for traffic on 18 May 2019: Highway passes through valley of South Morava, passes west of Niš, by Merošina and Leskovac, and after Grdelica built highway ends. 26 kilometers of highway under construction passes through Grdelica gorge, very difficult terrain. This sections is often considered", "id": "1785427" }, { "contents": "Čivelj\n\n\nČivelj is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in the municipality of Jablanica, Herzegovina-Neretva Canton, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1991, the village had six inhabitants, all of whom were Muslims. In 2013, Čivelj had 10 inhabitants. Tourism is solid. Civelj is placed 8 kilometres from Jablanica and it is placed on Jablanica lake. In lake there are 5 types of fishes including the most popular \"pastrmka\". The village was found in 1911. by local fishermen. Near Civelj", "id": "4645021" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nAlthough these streams are of low outflow, there are also numerous wellsprings rising on both sides of the canyon at the river banks, with high-capacity discharge. Three large hydroelectric power stations operate in this section of the Neretva, between Jablanica and Mostar, namely Grabovica HPP, Salakovac HPP and Mostar HPP. Jablanica lake is a large artificial lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva expands into a wide valley. The river provided fertile, agricultural land before the lake flooded most of it. The lake", "id": "12890353" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nThe Jasenica (Serbian Cyrillic: Јасеница, ) is a river in central Serbia. It is long and is the left tributary of the Great Morava. This river gives the name to the surrounding region. The Jasenica originates from several streams, most notably the Đurinci (Cyrillic: Ђуринци) from Venčac mountain, and the Srebrenica (Cyrillic: Сребреница) from the northern slopes of the Rudnik mountain in central Serbia. At its origin, the river runs through the eastern border of the Kačer region. It flows to the southeast", "id": "3481500" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nin north Skopje, Macedonia. The streams Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is, after passing the Macedonian-Serbian border, known as the Binačka Morava. After 49 km it meets the Preševska Moravica at Bujanovac, and for the remainder, 246 km, flows as the South Morava. The South Morava belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and its own drainage area is 15,696 km², of which 1,237 km² is in Bulgaria (through its right tributary Nišava). Its average", "id": "15699472" }, { "contents": "Pešter\n\n\nRivers Uvac, Vapa, Jablanica and Grabovica flow through the plateau. In the geologic past, the field was a large lake, of which only a small Sjenica lake near the village of Tuzinje remained. The soil is mostly karst interspersed with pastures. Economy of the area relies primarily on cattle breeding, chiefly sheep. Pešter is famous for its dairy products, especially the \"Sjenica cheese\" (\"Sjenički sir\"), as well as lamb and prosciutto. The plateau is sparsely populated: most settlements are on the", "id": "16748290" }, { "contents": "Sredačka župa\n\n\nSredačka Župa (; \"county of Sredska\") is a remote geographical region, a valley, in southeastern Kosovo, below the Šar Mountains at the source of the Prizrenska Bistrica. The region, an oval basin, lies below the Šar Mountains, at the source, upper stream of the Prizrenska Bistrica (\"Prizren river\"). South of the region between the Prizren mountains and Koritnik mountain, lies the Gora region. It currently includes Sredska, Pousko, Jablanica, Lokvica, Rečane, Živinjane, Planjane, Nebregošte,", "id": "13372292" }, { "contents": "Binačka Morava\n\n\nBinačka Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Биначка Морава; ) or (\"Mirusha\") is a river which flows in southeastern Kosovo and North Macedonia. It flows generally in the southwest to northeast direction, from Macedonian border to Bujanovac, where, after 49 km, meets Preševska Moravica, to create South Morava. The river begins in the mountain of Skopska Crna Gora, in North Macedonia, north of its capital Skopje. Streams of Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is,", "id": "12867615" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwar, the Albanian population depending on the area reacted differently to incoming Serbian forces by either offering resistance or fleeing toward nearby mountains and Ottoman Kosovo. Although most of these Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces, a small presence was allowed to remain in the Jablanica valley where their descendants live today. Serbs from Lab moved to Serbia during and after the first round of hostilities in 1876, while incoming Albanian refugees thereafter 1878 repopulated their villages. Albanian refugees also settled alongside the north-eastern Ottoman-Serbian border, in urban areas", "id": "1099553" }, { "contents": "Banjska River\n\n\nThe Banjska River ( / \"Banjska reka\", \"Baths River\"), is a river in southern Serbia, the right tributary of Toplica in which it flows near Kuršumlija. It rises under the far south-eastern branch of Kopaonik. It is 22 km long, with a river basin area of 155 km². The average flow at the mouth is 0,7 m³/s. The valley of the river is mostly ravines, while the basin is rich in forest. The Kuršumlija-Kuršumlijska Banja-Prepolac Pass-Podujevo-", "id": "14979528" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nby a catastrophic flood. Then unregulated river Jablanica, swollen after a long rainy period, broke on June 6, spilled out of its banks and caused enormous material damage Lebane. Flood toll was paid and human victims (killed two people). After this tragic event, with financial help, Lebane begins to industrialize faster, and the process of industrialization has caused more versatile and faster development of the city. According to the 2011 census, the municipality has 22,000 inhabitants. The ethnic composition of the municipality: The following table", "id": "17523935" }, { "contents": "Čvrsnica\n\n\nČvrsnica () is a mountain in the Dinarides of Bosnia and Herzegovina, located in northern Herzegovina, most of the mountain is located in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton municipalities of Mostar and Jablanica while the smaller part of the mountain, around 10% is located in the municipality of Posušje. The highest peak (Pločno) is 2228 metres. Čvrsnica is surrounded by the river Neretva from the east (20 km), its tributaries Doljanka (18 km) from the north and Drežanka (19.8 km) from the south,", "id": "6129606" }, { "contents": "Myjava (river)\n\n\nThe Myjava River is a river in western Slovakia and for a small part in the Czech Republic and left tributary of the Morava River. It rises in the White Carpathians near the village of Nová Lhota in Moravia, but crosses the Czech-Slovak border shortly afterwards and flows in a southern direction until the town of Myjava, where it enters the Myjava Hills and turns west. Near Sobotište it flows into the Záhorie Lowland and turns south until the village of Jablonica, turning northwest and from Senica it flows west, passing through", "id": "2099838" }, { "contents": "West Morava\n\n\nSouth and Great Morava's meridian (south-to-north) flow, the West Morava runs in an opposed, latitudinal (west-to-east) direction, dividing the region of Šumadija of the central Serbia from the southern parts of the country. Due to the West Morava's direction, it flows between many mountains, regions and sub-regions: The West Morava river valley, Zapadno Pomoravlje, is economically the most developed of all three Morava river valleys. With the valley of the Ibar, the West", "id": "7786624" }, { "contents": "Ralja (river)\n\n\nThe Ralja () is a river in Šumadija region of Serbia, a 51 km long left tributary to the Jezava, a tributary of the Great Morava river. It also gives its name to the surrounding Šumadija's subregion of Ralja. The Ralja originates from the northern part of the Kosmaj mountain, north of the village of Velika Ivanča, in the Sopot municipality of the City of Belgrade. Almost from the source, the river valley is a route for the Belgrade-Niš railway. At the villages of Popović and Mali", "id": "2491229" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nBovan gorge carved by the river and is very popular local and regional tourist destination, especially among campers and fishermen, but the coastline is not put in order. The river continues to the south, in an inverse flow, and after the villages of Subotinac and Kraljevo, it empties into the Južna Morava at the town of Aleksinac. The lower section used to be a coal mining area too, just like the upper one, but the mines (Aleksinački Rudnik) are closed now. The Sokobanjska Moravica brlongs to the Black", "id": "1726358" }, { "contents": "Golijska Moravica\n\n\nThe Golijska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Голијска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in western Serbia. With a length of 98 km, it is the longer headstream of the Zapadna Morava (it forms it with the Đetinja), and thus, of the Velika Morava. Its name, Moravica, means \"little Morava\" in Serbian, and it also gives its name to the surrounding region and the modern Moravica District of Serbia. The Golijska Moravica originates from the western slopes of the Golija mountain and flows", "id": "5380325" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\n. The Nišava is not navigable. It is not only the longest tributary of the Južna Morava, but also the largest one in terms of discharge (36 km/s). It has many smaller tributaries, the most important being the Temštica from the right, and the Jerma (or Sukovska reka), Crvena reka, Koritnička reka and Kutinska reka from the left. The Nišava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia: the route follows the valleys of the Morava", "id": "9627078" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nThe Toplica (Serbian Cyrillic: Топлица, ) is a river in southern Serbia. The river is 130 km long and gives its name to the region it flows through, which constitutes most of the modern Toplica District of Serbia. The Toplica originates under the name of \"Duboka\" from the eastern slopes of the Kopaonik mountain, just south of the highest peak, Pančićev vrh. It flows to the southeast, on the western slopes of the Lepa Gora mountain, next to the villages of Merćez, Selova, Žuč,", "id": "19530451" }, { "contents": "Great Morava\n\n\nof the Velika Morava's right tributary Resava). The average discharge of the Velika Morava on its confluence with Danube is 255 m³/s (120 m³/s brought by Zapadna Morava, 100 m³/s by Južna Morava, and 35 m³/s amounted by the Velika Morava itself). Tributaries of the Velika Morava are short, the longest one being the Jasenica (79 km) and others rarely exceeding 50 km. Right tributaries are: Jovanovačka reka, Crnica, Ravanica, Resava and Resavica (or Resavčina). Left tributaries are more numerous,", "id": "2295702" }, { "contents": "Vevčani\n\n\nVevčani () is a village in the Republic of North Macedonia. It is the only settlement and seat of Vevčani Municipality. The village of Vevčani is found in the southwestern range at the foot of the Jablanica mountain range. It is situated from 800 – 950 metres above sea level. The village is located 14 km North-West of the town of Struga. The village is situated near the villages of Oktisi, Velešta, Podgorci, Gorna Belica with the Albanian border to the West of the village. The famous Vevčani", "id": "5042995" } ]
The Jablanica ( Serbian : Јабланица , ) is an river in southern Serbia . A left tributary of the South ( or Južna ) Morava river , it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia 's Jablanica District , with the region contributing about one third of the district 's area . The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain , near the village of Grbavce , on the administrative border of the [START_ENT] Kosovo [END_ENT] province . The area is rich in thermal springs , so several spas are located near the river : Stara Banja , Ravna Banja and Sijarina with popular Sijarinska Banja . At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary Čokotinska reka ( Cyrillic : Чокотинска река ) , turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point . The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the and Radan mountains , in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the in Kosovo . The river flows eastward , passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo , before reaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac , part of the depression of Leskovac , which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava . In the region , near Lebane , a famed archeological find of ( Iustiniana Prima ) is located . The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo , Vranovce , Bošnjace , Turekovac and Stopanje , reaches Vinarce , the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac , and turns north . First it flows parallel to the Veternica river , to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje , then parallel to the Južna Morava . After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava . From Pečenjevce , a parallel flow ( canal ) begins , connecting the Jablanica and s , some 15 km to the north . Through Južna Morava , the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin , draining an area of 895 km ² itself . It 's not navigable and has an average discharge of 6 m ³ / s , which in rainy years grows much higher , so the river floods its valley causing lots of material damage . The name of the river , Jablanica , in Serbian means the
6055aaa3-e714-453d-91e8-03bf55eac0b0_river:5
[{"answer": "Kosovo", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "17391", "title": "Kosovo"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nreaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac, part of the depression of Leskovac, which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. In the region, near Lebane, a famed archeological find of Caričin grad (\"Iustiniana Prima\") is located. The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo, Vranovce, Bošnjace, Turekovac and Stopanje, reaches Vinarce, the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac", "id": "3481303" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\n, and turns north. First it flows parallel to the Veternica river, to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje, then parallel to the Južna Morava. After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava. From Pečenjevce, a parallel flow (canal) begins, connecting the Jablanica and Toplica rivers, some 15 km to the north. Through Južna Morava, the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, draining an area of itself. It's not navigable", "id": "3481304" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\npopular Sijarinska Banja. At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary \"Čokotinska reka\" (Cyrillic: \"Чокотинска река\"), turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point. The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the Majdan and Radan mountains, in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the District of Priština in Kosovo. The river flows eastward, passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo, before", "id": "3481302" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nThe Jablanica (, ) is an river in southern Serbia. A left tributary of the South (or Južna) Morava river, it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia's Jablanica District, with the region contributing about one third of the district's area. The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain, near the village of Grbavce, on the border with Kosovo. The area is rich in thermal springs, so several spas are located near the river: Stara Banja, Ravna Banja and Sijarina with", "id": "3481301" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nJablanica with third parallel flow, the \"Sušica\", being formed in between. Settlements include many small villages, like Vina, Bukova Gora, Miroševce, Žabljane, Beli Potok and Strojkovce. In the Leskovac field, the river gently turns north, receives the Sušica from the left and reaches the town of Leskovac. The Veternica continues northward, being connected to the Jablanica river by the canal at the village of Bogojevce, before it empties into the Južna Morava. The Veternica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its", "id": "11539775" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nThe Veternica (Serbian Cyrillic: Ветерница, ) is a river in southern Serbia, a 75 km long left tributary to the Južna Morava, which gives the name to the region surrounding its valley. The Veternica originates from the Grot peak, the southernmost part of the Kukavica mountain. Four smaller streams meet at the village of Vlase and continue to the north as the Veternica. The river flows next to the villages of Golemo Selo, Oštra Glava and Gagince, where it flows parallel to the Jablanica river. As the Veternica", "id": "11539773" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nbends to the northeast, it enters the low Veternica region, part of the Leskovac field in the composite valley of the Južna Morava. Small region, located between the Kukavica mountain on the south and the Jablanica region on the north, is divided in two micro-regions, upper one being centered on the small town of Vučje (which is not located on the river itself) while the center of the lower micro-region is the town of Leskovac. As it enters the region, the Veternica furthers away from the", "id": "11539774" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nthe west, Kukavica and Čemernik in the south and Babička Gora, Seličevica and Suva Planina to the east. The largest river in the region of Leskovac is the South Morava River, which flows south to north. Tributaries of the South Morava are: the Vlasina river, which collects water from Lake Vlasina and flows through Crna Trava and Vlasotince; the Veternica river, which flows through Leskovac; the Jablanica river, which springs from the foot of Goljak and flows through Medveđa and Lebane; the Pusta (Deserted) river,", "id": "2857704" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nof 590 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and is not navigable. The region of Pusta Reka mostly correspondence with the river's watershed. It is located between the Pasjača mountain and lower Toplica region (on the north), the Southern Pomoravlje (Field of Leskovac, on the east), the Jablanica region (on the south) and the Radan mountain (on the west). The region is an agricultural area, almost without any industry, except for some smaller facilities in regional center, Bojnik", "id": "12523581" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nof Podina, Voljčince, Badnjevac and the smaller regional center Žitorađa. After the Toplica reaches municipal center of Doljevac, it enters the most densely populated part of the south Pomoravlje, turns north and flows into the Južna Morava at the village of Orljane, across the medieval ruins of Kurvin grad, as Južna Morava's longest left tributary. The Toplica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its own drainage area of 2,217 km². The river is not navigable. The river valley is a major traffic route in southern Serbia as", "id": "19530454" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nThe Sokobanjska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Сокобањска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in central eastern Serbia, a 58 km-long right tributary to the Južna Morava river. The Sokobanjska Moravica originates from the eastern slopes of the Devica mountain, near the village of Skrobnica. The river flows to the north, turns westward at the village of Levovik and enters the Banja region. The rivers flows between the northern slopes of the Devica and Ozren mountains (on the south) and southern slopes of the Rtanj mountain", "id": "1726356" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\nmouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. As the wider Jabllanica region, Medveđa also had an Albanian majority. These Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces in a way that today would be characterized as ethnic cleansing. Due to depopulation and economic considerations some small numbers of Albanians were allowed to stay and return though not to their previous settlements and instead were designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of", "id": "7117787" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\n, a notable Muslim population existed in the districts of Niš, Pirot, Vranje, Leskovac, Prokuplje and Kuršumlija. The rural parts of Toplica, Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the", "id": "1099558" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nthe southernmost slopes of the Suva Planina and Babička Gora mountains, it reaches the town of Vlasotince and western parts of the low Leskovac field, part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. After the villages of Batulovce and Stajkovce, the Vlasina empties into the Južna Morava, east of the Leskovac's eastern suburb of Mrštane. The Vlasina drains an area of 991 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin and it is not navigable. On 26 June 1988, after a period of heavy rains, Vlasina was a", "id": "14981332" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nThe Pusta River ( / \"Pusta reka\", \"Desolate River\") is a river in southern Serbia, a 71-km long left tributary to the South Morava. It also gives the name to the Pusta Reka region in its valley. The river originates northeast of Prolom Banja, near the Sokolovica village, on the northern tip of the Radan mountain, as the \"Golema River\" (\"Big River\"). It flows eastward, between the mountains of Radan (to the south) and Pasjača (to the", "id": "12523579" }, { "contents": "Persecution of Muslims during Ottoman contraction\n\n\nReka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the Turks were of Albanian origin. The Muslims in the cities of Niš and Pirot were Turkish-speaking; Vranje and Leskovac were Turkish- and Albanian-speaking; Prokuplje", "id": "8891598" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nvalley between Konjic and Jablanica, known simply as \"Neretva\" since Middle Ages, the new point for hydrographical division became dam of the Jablanica HPP where also is a place of confluence of the rivers Neretva and Rama. Here the Neretva river suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before it reach town of Jablanica. From this point it turns again toward south and enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes of the mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica", "id": "12890350" }, { "contents": "Rama (Neretva)\n\n\nRama is a river in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a major tributary of the Neretva. It joins it from the right by discharging into Neretva's artificial reservoir, Jablaničko lake, at place called Marina Pećina, near village of Gračac, between location of underground powerhouse of Rama Hydroelectric Power Station and Jablanica Dam, depending on water level in Jablaničko lake, some 15 kilometers upstream from Jablanica. The Rama flows through municipalities of Prozor-Rama and Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, while its headwaters together with wellsprings in the region of", "id": "3052779" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\nThe Kolubara (Serbian Cyrillic: Колубара, ), is a long river in western Serbia; it is an eastern, right tributary to the Sava river. Kolubara is formed by the two small rivers Obnica and Jablanica. \"Obnica\" is the river in Western Serbia that springs at the foot of the mountain Medvednik. It flows to the East, through the villages of Suvodanje, Bobova, Majinović, Pričević and Zlatarić, and at the city of Valjevo meets the river \"Jablanica\" and forms Kolubara. The Obnica is", "id": "20109582" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\ndating to the 4th century AD lay at various locations of the town, as it was a transitory zone of Upper Moesia; travel and postal stations are among the finds. Toponyms such as \"Arbanaška\" and \"Đjake\" shows an Albanian presence in the Toplica and Southern Morava regions (located north-east of contemporary Kosovo) before the expulsion of Albanians during 1877–1878 period. The rural parts of Jablanica valley and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river", "id": "7117786" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\naverage elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva again expands into a third and largest valley which provided fertile agricultural land before it was flooded by large artificial reservoir, Jablaničko Lake, formed after construction of a Jablanica Dam near town of Jablanica. The second section begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before reaches town of Jablanica, from which point turns again toward south. From", "id": "12890343" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nLebane () is a town and municipality located in Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 10,062 inhabitants, while the municipality has 20,000 inhabitants. The town is located at the confluence of the rivers Jablanica and Šumanska Reka, in the alluvial plain created by the former. Just northeast of the town a larger plain called Leskovačko polje extends toward the town of Leskovac, which is the district seat. The elevation of the town of Lebane is between 275.2 and 420 MASL.", "id": "17523929" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nRakic writes about it as a \"\"big village populated by Serbs, in a valley, on the river Jablanica, on its left bank.\"\" Only when Lebane got the role of Jablanica district headquarters, it began to gradually develop in a direction of a small town. The core of this small town was a series of houses along the Jablanica which is 45m wide here (as is even now); at the end of this series are the buildings of the Court and Municipality. The main feature of", "id": "17523931" }, { "contents": "Štulac (Lebane)\n\n\nthe village of Prekopčelica. The village is located on the valley slopes of the Caričin Potok creek. It is scattered between the altitudes of . It is situated in the wider Pusta Reka region. The village rests on the western slopes of the , which here divides the regions of Pusta Reka and Jablanica. On the west, the easternmost slopes of the Radan mountain begin. The village area covers . The Slavs settled in the area in the 7th century, centering around the ruins of Iustiniana Prima. Due to the lack of", "id": "11151840" }, { "contents": "Grdelica\n\n\nGrdelica () is a town in southern Serbia. It is situated in the Leskovac municipality, in the Jablanica District. The total population of the town was 3,194 people as of the 2011 census. For census purposes, Grdelica is divided into two adjacent parts, southern \"Grdelica town\" (\"Grdelica varoš\"; population 2,136) and northern \"Grdelica village\" (\"Grdelica selo\"; 1,058). Grdelica lies at the South Morava river, on the mountainous terrain at the entrance of the Grdelica Gorge. It", "id": "460756" }, { "contents": "Gornji Bučumet\n\n\nall settlements registered separately in the census. The three settlements lie in the South Morava basin, above the Jablanica river, and as such are located in the Upper Jablanica region. The highest mountain in Upper Bučumet is Paramid (853), with the mountain of Sv. Petar (1149) being located in Middle Bučumet. The three neighbourhoods of Bučumet are 470 to 853 metres above sea level. There is a medieval church built on the ruins of an older church. During the Toplica-Jablanica Operation (, ) in", "id": "12752738" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nthe huge floods of its daughter river. The South Morava has 157 tributaries. The most important left tributaries are: Jablanica, Veternica, Pusta reka and Toplica. Right tributaries are: Vrla, Vlasina, Nišava (the longest) and Sokobanjska Moravica. The South Morava has a significant potential for electricity production, and a huge hydroelectrical system (Vlasina- Vrla I-IV power stations) has been constructed in its drainage basin. To a certain extent, its waters are used for irrigation. The river valley's most important role", "id": "15699476" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nThe Rasina () is a river in south central Serbia. The long river flows through the Rasina region, gives its name to the modern Rasina District of Serbia, and flows into the Zapadna Morava near the city of Kruševac. Its historical name is Arsen (Αρσεγα). The Rasina springs from the southern slopes of the Goč mountain, near the village of Rašovka, southwest of the most famous Serbian spa, Vrnjačka Banja. The river originally flows to the southeast, around the mountains of Željin and Kopaonik, next to", "id": "209716" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nLeskovac (Serbian Cyrillic: Лесковац, ) is a city and the administrative center of the Jablanica District in southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the city urban area has 60,288 inhabitants, while the city administrative area has 144,206. Traces of life of the Brnjica culture (8th century BC) is seen at the Hisar Hill (Hisar Leskovac) that was protected by a deep moat with a palisade on its inner side, a fortification similar to that of another fortification on the site near Zlokućane in the Velika Morava basin", "id": "2857693" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nThe favorable location and the richness of nature made Jablanica valley important place since the earliest times. Traffic affordable and fertile, Leskovac valley has provided favorable conditions for the settlement of population. Archaeological findings, of which the most important are Hissar and Caričin grad (Iustiniana Prima) show that life in this area, continuously evolved from prehistoric man to date. First mention of Lebane as Hlebane dates back to 1512. Lebane is formed as a village of the same name after the liberation in 1878. Visiting Serbia in 1880s, M.", "id": "17523930" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nThe South Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Јужна Морава, Serbian Latin: \"Južna Morava\", ; ) is a river in eastern Kosovo and in southern Serbia, which represents the shorter headwater of Great Morava. Today, it is 295 km long, including its source river Binačka Morava. It flows generally in the south to north direction, from Macedonian border to Kosovo and onwards to Central Serbia, where it meets West Morava at Stalać, to create Great Morava. The river rises in the Skopska Crna Gora mountain", "id": "15699471" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\nis the Rzav's longer headstream. It originates from the Čigota mountain, eastern section of the Zlatibor mountain. The river originally flows northward, next to the villages of Vodice and Jokina Ćuprija, reaches the central section of the Zlatibor where it is dammed and creates the artificial Ribnica lake (surface area of 10 km²), after the nearby village of Ribnica. After the lake, the river sharply turns west and soon gets followed by the parallel stream of the \"Jablanica\" river. After crossing the village of Mokra Gora", "id": "11540154" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\n25 km long. Jablanica originates on the eastern slopes of the Jablanik mountain, just few kilometers away from Obnica. It curves around Parač mountain and next to the village of Balinović, before it meets Obnica in Valjevo. Jablanica is 21.5 km long. This is also the beginning of the long region of the Kolubara valley, divided in two large parts, referred to as Upper (\"gornja\") Kolubara and Lower (\"donja\") Kolubara (around the Belgrade's suburb of Obrenovac). At Valjevo, the", "id": "20109583" }, { "contents": "Jablanica District\n\n\nThe Jablanica District (, ) is one of nine administrative districts of Southern and Eastern Serbia. It expands in the south-eastern parts of Serbia. According to the 2011 census results, it has a population of 215,463 inhabitants. The administrative center of the district is the city of Leskovac. The district encompasses the municipalities of: According to the 2011 census results, the Jablanica Distract has a total population of 216,304 inhabitants. Ethnic composition of the Jablanica District: Famous cultural-historic monuments in this District are: the Roman", "id": "13223854" }, { "contents": "Kalna, Crna Trava\n\n\nKalna () is a small village in the Crna Trava municipality of the Jablanica District of Serbia. Kalna village is an old Serbian village, 35 km away from the Crna Trava. It is located between Tumba and Serbian-Bulgarian border, at an altitude of 500 to 1100 m. The total area is rural area of 7285 hectares. The Kalna can be reached from three directions: The road in this way was there since the Turkish rule. It was the shortest connection of Leskovac valley (Dubočica) to Sofia and Constantinople", "id": "11211518" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina-Neretva Canton\n\n\ntook place there during World War II and there is a large museum in Jablanica dedicated to these battles. The Neretva river runs through the cities of Konjic, Jablanica, Mostar and Čapljina before it flows through Croatia and into the Adriatic Sea. There are large lakes in the canton such as the Jablanica lake located around the city Jablanica. The southern most municipality in the canton is the Neum municipality which borders the Adriatic sea and the eastern most municipality is the Ravno municipality along the border with Croatia. Of the ten cantons comprising", "id": "3225485" }, { "contents": "Vardar Corps\n\n\nThe Vardar Corps was a corps of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland (JVuO) that operated on the left bank of the river Vardar during the World War II in Yugoslavia on the territory of modern-day North Macedonia and southern Serbia. Its commander was former Captain of the Royal Guard of the Royal Yugoslav Army Stojan Krstić. It consisted of four brigades with total number of 1,000 soldiers. Together with Jablanica Corps, South Morava Corps and Flying Corps it belonged under \"Mountain Staff 110\" () located in Sijarinska Banja", "id": "11325997" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nthe villages of Mitrovo Polje, Bzenica, Pleš, Jablanica, Grčak, Toskići, Budilovina and Milentija. When the Rasina reaches the small town of Brus, it enters the upper Rasina region and continues next to the villages of Tršanovci, Lepenac and Razbojna. At this point the river reaches the western side of the Veliki Jastrebac mountain, and makes a wide, elbow turn to the north. In this part of the course, the Rasina also makes a southeast border of the Aleksandrovačka Župa region. After the villages of Bogiše", "id": "209717" }, { "contents": "Doljanka\n\n\nDoljanka is a right tributary of Neretva river in North Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The length of Doljanka is around 18 km and reaches an altitude drop of about 400 m. Arises from sources scattered type under the far northeast slopes of Vran mountain on altitude of 1324 m. It runs through limestone canyon, which is high up to 1,200 m and flows through the village of Doljani. Doljanka flows into the Neretva River between Jablanica and Mostar, at an altitude of 300 m. It is also the connection over which trouts from the Neretva", "id": "8874715" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nValley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Albanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje", "id": "17667163" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n. The Neretva then flows northwest, through Konjic. It enters the Jablanica Reservoir (\"Jablaničko jezero\"), one of the largest in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake ends near the town of Jablanica. From here on, the Neretva turns southward, continuing to the Adriatic Sea. With the mountains lining its shores gradually receding, the Neretva enters a valley where the city of Mostar lies. It flows under the old bridge (\"Stari most\") and continues, now wider, toward the town of Čapljina and", "id": "3021139" }, { "contents": "Radan (mountain)\n\n\nRadan (Serbian Cyrillic: Радан) is a mountain in southern Serbia, near the town of Kuršumlija. Its highest peak, Šopot, has an elevation of 1,408 meters above sea level. Radan separates the valleys of the Toplica and Jablanica rivers. It is well covered with deciduous and evergreen forests. The best known spot on Radan is the Devil's Town – a peculiar rock formation consisting of hundreds of mushroom-like posts, located on its southern slopes. Near the Devil's Town there are ruins of Ivanova kula –", "id": "3957176" }, { "contents": "Crni Timok\n\n\nкотлина, \"depression of Crna Reka\"), populated with many smaller villages (Lukovo, Jablanica, Valakonje, Savinac, Gamzigrad, Zvezdan). At Gamzigrad there is also an important archeological site from Roman times. After a flow of 84 km, the Crni Timok reaches Zaječar, where it joins the Beli Timok River, forming the Veliki Timok River. It drains an area of . Early in its course it receives from the right the Radovanska, Suva, Velika, Salešča, Šarbanovačka, Jasenova, Bajnska and Suva", "id": "11459489" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (mountain range)\n\n\nJablanica ( ; ) is a mountain range in Southern and Southeastern Europe, stretching north-south direction across the border of Albania and the Republic of North Macedonia. The long mountain ridge is higher than for approximately , while the highest part, located in its very center, is Black Stone at high. Both countries have 50% of the mountain, Albania the west and North Macedonia the east. Jablanica Mountain contains many large mountain lakes. Shebenik mountain is located just to the west of Jablanica and give name to the Shebenik", "id": "3232652" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nThe Vlasina (Serbian Cyrillic: Власина), is a river in southeastern Serbia, a 70 km-long outflow of the Vlasina Lake and a right tributary to the Južna Morava, which also gives its name to the surrounding Vlasina region. The Vlasina flows out from the Vlasina Lake at an altitude of 1,213 m. Lake used to be a large, muddy peat bog, but in 1947-51 the Vlasina was dammed by the long, earth dam and the bog was turned into an artificial lake. The river flows to", "id": "14981330" }, { "contents": "Desná (Morava)\n\n\nDesná () is a river situated in Olomouc region of Czech republic, left tributary of the Morava. It is 43.4 km long, and its basin area is 338 km. The Desná river originates at the confluence of Hučivá Desná and Divoká Desná in Kouty nad Desnou, the village situated in deep valley of High Ash Mountains. The Desná then goes southwest through a valley toward the town of Šumperk. After approximately 43.4 km, the Desná flows into the Morava river near Postřelmov village.The mean annual discharge at its mouth", "id": "20977814" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nSerbian forces then headed south into the Morava valley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Muslims fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Turks fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Muslims departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessalonika. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in", "id": "1099566" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n, in the center of the region. Other larger towns include Trebinje, Stolac, Široki Brijeg, Posušje, Ljubuški, Grude, Konjic, and Čapljina. Borders between Herzegovina and Bosnia are unclear and often disputed. The upper flow of the Neretva River lies in northern Herzegovina, a heavily forested area with fast-flowing rivers and high mountains. Konjic and Jablanica lie in this area. The Neretva rises on Lebršnik Mountain, close to the Montenegro border, and as the river flows west, it enters Herzegovina. The entire", "id": "3021137" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nUpper Neretva, of the Neretva river from its source at 1,227 m.a.s.l. and headwaters gorge all the way to the town of Konjic is 90 km, flows from south to north - north-west as most of the Bosnia and Herzegovina rivers belonging to the Danube watershed, and cover some 1,390 km with average elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva briefly expanding into a wide valley which provides fertile agricultural land. There exists a large Jablaničko Lake, artificially formed after construction of dam near Jablanica. \"Second", "id": "16797216" }, { "contents": "Kubršnica\n\n\nThe Kubršnica (Serbian Cyrillic: Кубршница) is a river in Šumadija region of central Serbia, a 42 km-long left and the longest tributary to the Jasenica river. The Kubršnica originates from the Venčac mountain, in the Jasenica sub-region of Šumadija, in the wider area of the town of Aranđelovac. The terrain in the source area of the river is rich in marble and fireclay. The river flows to the east, next to the Aranđelovac's suburb of Banja and turns north near Topola. After the villages", "id": "5629731" }, { "contents": "Peć Bistrica\n\n\nkm-long, Rugovo glacier. The gorge is sparsely inhabited (the village of Mali Štupelj). As it comes out of the gorge, the Peć Bistrica reaches the town of Peć and enters the bottom of the Metohija depression through which it flows for the rest of its course. It runs parallel to the flows of the White Drin to the north and the Dečanska Bistrica to the south, next to the villages of Goraždevac, Lješane, Jablanica, Drenovce and Zaimovo, before it empties into the White Drin south of", "id": "15886949" }, { "contents": "Zlatibor\n\n\nsylvestris\" var. \"zlatiborica\" is a subspecies of pine originating from the mountain, and is endangered today. A hill by the name of Cigla\",\" located near the nearby village of Jablanica, still has some borderline markings of the Kingdom of Serbia, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Zlatibor itself is located in the northern part of the Stari Vlah region, a historical border region between Raška, Herzegovina and Bosnia. It spreads over an area of , in length, southeast to northwest, and up", "id": "3906304" }, { "contents": "Serbian Christmas traditions\n\n\nhousehold. The members of the group were called \"koledari\". The \"koleda\" was carried out from the Feast of Saint Ignatius Theophorus (five days before Christmas) up until the Epiphany. This custom was best preserved in the upper Pčinja District, and in the region around the River South Morava in the Jablanica District, southeastern Serbia. Regarded as pagan and discouraged by the Serbian Orthodox Church, the \"koleda\" ceased to be performed among most of the Serbs during the 19th and 20th centuries. \"Koledari\"", "id": "20573743" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwere designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of Medveđa have small numbers of Albanians and their descendants remained. This was due to a local Ottoman Albanian commander Shahid Pasha from the Jablanica area negotiating on good terms with Prince Milan and thereby guaranteeing their presence. Some other Albanians such as merchants attempted to remain in Niš, but they left after murders occurred and their property was sold off at low values. In 1879, some Albanian refugees from", "id": "1099570" }, { "contents": "Kosovo Pomoravlje\n\n\nThe region's largest cities are Gjilan and Bujanovac. The region is known as \"Kosovsko Pomoravlje\" (Косовско Поморавље, \"Morava Valley of Kosovo\") in Serbian and as Lugina e Anamoraves Binçes (\"Valley of Binač Morava\") in Albanian. Its name is derived from the Binač Morava River, which flows through northern Macedonia, eastern Kosovo and southern Serbia as part of the Great Morava river system. The region includes part of the valley and the Karadak and Koznik mountains. Gjilan has six municipalities and 287 smaller", "id": "13339352" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nAlbanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje, with the intention of then turning west and", "id": "17667142" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\nThe Resavčina (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресавчина) is a river in Serbia, a 32 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. It is sometimes also called \"Resavica\" or \"Resava\" (not to be confused with another Velika Morava's right tributary of Resava or its own tributary of Resavica). The Resavčina originates near the village of Proštinac in Svilajnac municipality. The river originally flows to the north, but soon turns west at the village of Dubnica and enters the western half of the Veliko Pomoravlje region", "id": "4886222" }, { "contents": "Ibar (river)\n\n\nThe Ibar, also known as the Ibër and Ibri (, , ), is a river that flows through eastern Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, with a total length of . The river begins in the Hajla mountain, in Rožaje, eastern Montenegro, and passes through Kosovo to flow into the West Morava river near Kraljevo, central Serbia. It belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area is , with an average discharge of 60 m³/s at the mouth. It is not navigable. The Ibar originates from", "id": "4536148" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Ilirska Bistrica\n\n\nJablanica (; ) is a settlement southeast of Ilirska Bistrica in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. Jablanica is the site of three known mass graves or unmarked graves from the end of the Second World War. They all contain the remains of German soldiers from the 97th Corps that were killed at the beginning of May 1945. The Mountain Fields Mass Grave (), also known as the Mountain Mass Grave (), lies in a meadow about 1.6 km northeast of Jablanica and contains the remains of 10 soldiers. The Solne Mass", "id": "16911511" }, { "contents": "Čezsoča\n\n\nČezsoča (; ) is a settlement in the Municipality of Bovec in the Littoral region of Slovenia. It includes the hamlets of Gorenja Vas (), Dolenja Vas (), Jablanica, Kršovec, and Na Glavi. Čezsoča lies in the valley on the left bank of the Soča River. The terrain then rises up towards Mount Polovnik (1,480 m). East of the settlement is Humčič Hill (810 m), behind which rises Mount Javoršček (1,557 m). Oplenk Creek flows through the village between Gorenja Vas and", "id": "14920585" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nJablanica, the Neretva enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching in depth. Three hydroelectric dams operate between Jablanica and Mostar. When the Neretva expands for the second and final time, it reaches its third section. This area is often colloquially called the \"\"Bosnian and Herzegovinian California\"\". The last of its course forms wide alluvial delta, before the river empties into the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Tatinac (also known as the", "id": "12890344" }, { "contents": "Jablaničko lake\n\n\nJablaničko lake () is a large artificially formed lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva briefly expands into a wide valley. River provided lot of fertile, agricultural land there, before lake flooded most of it. The lake was created in 1953 after construction of Jablanica Dam near Jablanica in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake has an irregular elongated shape. Its width varies along its length. The lake is a popular vacation destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Swimming, boating and especially fishing are popular activities", "id": "13828307" }, { "contents": "Jablanica Dam\n\n\nThe Jablanica Dam is an arch-gravity dam on the Neretva River about northeast of Jablanica in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The dam was constructed between 1947 and 1955 with the primary purpose of hydroelectric power production. The power station was commissioned in two stages, from 1955 until 1958. The first generator was commissioned in February 1955. An upgrade in 2008 increased the installed capacity of the power station from 150 MW to 180 MW. The dam's power station is located about to the southeast near Jablanica", "id": "854706" }, { "contents": "Jablanik\n\n\nJablanik (Serbian Cyrillic: Јабланик) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Valjevo. Its highest peak \"Jablanik\" has an elevation of 1,275 meters(10001020_ above sea level. Jablanik is located at the source of the river Jablanica. It is separated from nearby Medvednik mountain by high pass Stolica, while the Debelo Brdo saddle separates it from Povlen in the southeast. The highest peak has the same name as the mountain itself - Jablanik, and is 1,275 m high. The hills around the peak are mainly", "id": "366162" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\nThe Nišava or Nishava (Bulgarian and , ) is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia, a right tributary, and with a length of 218 km also the longest one, of the South Morava. The Nišava originates in western Bulgaria, in the Stara Planina mountains (east of Kom Peak) near the village of Gintsi. Its source is close to the Serbian border. It enters Serbia after 67 km of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries. Because it flows through Gintsi, the upper course of the river is", "id": "9627075" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nAfter Mramorac village, the Jasenica spills over in several parallel flows, which continue until its confluence. After the Pridvorica and Vodice villages (on different arms of the river), the Jasenica reaches the town of Smederevska Palanka, the most populous settlement in its valley. This is also where the Kubršnica, its main tributary, flows into it from the left. The Jasenica then gently bends to the east, flowing into the Great Morava near the village of Veliko Orašje (the southern arm of the river flows through the town", "id": "3481502" }, { "contents": "Gruža (river)\n\n\nThe Gruža (Serbian Cyrillic: Гружа, ) is a river in central Serbia. The river is a 62 km long left tributary to the Zapadna Morava. The Gruža originates in the central part of the Rudnik mountain, right under the mountain's main settlement, the village of Rudnik, northeast of the town of Gornji Milanovac, central Serbia. The river flows south next to the village of Majdan, around the Rudnik mountain into the Takovo region and at the village of Nevade, just few kilometers away from Gornji Milanovac,", "id": "10971320" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\n(hamlet Panjak) on the Serbian-Bosnian border Crni Rzav meets the Jablanica river at the village Gornje Vardište and finally the river Beli Rzav at the village of Donje Vardište. The Rzav continues as the natural extension of the Beli Rzav, but since the Black Rzav is longer, the latter is considered to be the main headstream. It floes between the southernmost part of the Zvijezda mountain (\"Ponos\" peak) from the north and the Suha Gora mountain from the south, next to the villages of Prosjek (and", "id": "11540155" }, { "contents": "Ub (river)\n\n\nThe Ub (Serbian Cyrillic: Уб) is a river in western Serbia, a 57 km-long right and longest tributary to Tamnava river. The Ub originates from the Vlašić mountain in Podgorina region of west Serbia, near the village of Kasapo. From its source to the mouth, the river flows to the east, parallel to the river Tamnava, which it will eventually join. The villages located in the upper section of the river's flow are Družetić, Pambukovica and Čučuge, where the Ub slightly turns to the", "id": "2261401" }, { "contents": "Olomouc Region\n\n\nof the region is situated on the water level of the Morava River near to Kojetín in the Přerov District (190 m above sea level). The Morava river flows through the region and the majority of the region's territory belongs to Morava’s drainage basin. A small northern part of the region belongs to the drainage basin of Odra River, which flows to the Baltic Sea. The Olomouc Region offers a great variety of natural points of interest. Protected landscape area of the Jeseníky mountains offers a number of scenic places such", "id": "11419394" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina\n\n\nJablanica is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is situated on the Neretva river and Jablanica lake. The municipality of Jablanica is a major tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The municipality offer a wide variety of activities. The surrounding mountains such as Plasa, Čvrsnica and Prenj offer both hunting grounds and a variety of hiking trails. One popular hiking destination is \"Hajdučka Vrata\", a natural wonder, the product of wind", "id": "9009264" }, { "contents": "Krupá (Morava)\n\n\nKrupá (German: Graupa Bach) is a creek in Šumperk District, Moravia, left tributary of the Morava. Its length is 19,2 km and its drainage basin covers 112.7 km2. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 4.48 m³/s. The Krupá originates in Czech part of the Śnieżnik Mountains, 400 meters above sea level. The Krupá then goes south toward the town of Staré Město. It flows into the Morava river near Hanušovice town. River keeps its natural character with meanders and original riversides. A river bottom is", "id": "1745557" }, { "contents": "Oskava (river)\n\n\nOskava is a river in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic, left tributary of the Morava river. Its length is 50.3 km and its drainage basin covers 569 km. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 3.53 m/s. The Oskava originates from southeast slope of Kamenná hora in Hrubý Jeseník, 215 meters above sea level. The river is surrounded by woods in upper reaches, flows through hills of Nízký Jeseník in middle reaches and its lower reaches is situated in swampy floodplain of Litovelské Pomoraví Protected Landscape Area.", "id": "8538845" }, { "contents": "Crna Trava\n\n\nCrna Trava ( ) is a village and municipality located in the Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to 2011 census, the population of the village is 434 inhabitants, while population of the municipality is 1,663. This is the smallest by population and poorest municipality in Serbia. Crna Trava is famous for its migrant builders, who are considered the best in the region and are colloquially described as \"building half of Yugoslavia\". The name of the village in Serbian translates to \"Black Grass\". The origin of the name", "id": "18032485" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\n. At the village of Kušiljevo, the river receives the small stream of \"Beljeva\" from the left and turns northward, which is the general direction of its course for the rest of the flow. The river flows parallel to the Velika Morava river as its satellite flow, in the Morava's floodplain, so there are no settlements on the Resavica itself, but several large villages are located in its valley (Porodin, Žabari, Simićevo, Aleksandrovac Požarevački, Vlaški Do, Poljana), all of them located on the", "id": "4886223" }, { "contents": "Lugomir\n\n\nThe Lugomir (Serbian Cyrillic: Лугомир) is a river in central Serbia, a 57 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. The Lugomir originates from two headstreams, the Dulenska reka and the Županjevačka reka. The shorter headstream of Županjevačka reka (Cyrillic: \"Жупањевачка река\") originates from the mountain of Gledićke planine in southern Šumadija region of central Serbia. Its spring is just some 500 m away from the source of Lugomir's another headstream, the Dulenska reka. The river first flows to the east", "id": "5130918" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\ncities in Serbia, 10 km after which the Nišava empties into the Južna Morava. However, with the rapid growth of Niš in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs, the banks of the Nišava are urbanized almost to its mouth. After being divided into districts in 1992, the Nišava District (with Niš as administrative center) is named after the river. The river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area covers 4,086 km, of which about 73% in Serbia, the rest in Bulgaria", "id": "9627077" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nsection\" begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama river between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes a southern course and enter a largest canyons of its course, running through steep slopes of magnificent mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching 800–1200 meters in depth. From here Neretva flows toward the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Jezernica (also Tatinac), the Gornji and Donji Krupac, the Ljuta-Dindolka, the Jesenica, the Bjelimićka Rijeka, the Slatinica, the Račica, the Rakitnica, the Konjička", "id": "16797217" }, { "contents": "Resava (river)\n\n\nThe Resava (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресава) is a river in central Serbia, a 65 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava. It also gives the name to the surrounding Resava region, the Resava Monastery, the coal mines in its valley and a popular tourist destination of Resava Cave. The Resava originates from the Homolje region in eastern Serbia. It springs out at an altitude of 1,100 m and flows westward between the mountains of Beljanica (on the north) and Kučaj (on the south). In its", "id": "15040274" }, { "contents": "A1 motorway (Serbia)\n\n\nJužna Morava river. Southern section (Niš–Leskovac–Vranje–Macedonian border) consists of 128 km that are in service, while additional 26 km are under construction. Construction of southern section has been completed by May 2019, and last sections opened for traffic on 18 May 2019: Highway passes through valley of South Morava, passes west of Niš, by Merošina and Leskovac, and after Grdelica built highway ends. 26 kilometers of highway under construction passes through Grdelica gorge, very difficult terrain. This sections is often considered", "id": "1785427" }, { "contents": "Čivelj\n\n\nČivelj is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in the municipality of Jablanica, Herzegovina-Neretva Canton, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1991, the village had six inhabitants, all of whom were Muslims. In 2013, Čivelj had 10 inhabitants. Tourism is solid. Civelj is placed 8 kilometres from Jablanica and it is placed on Jablanica lake. In lake there are 5 types of fishes including the most popular \"pastrmka\". The village was found in 1911. by local fishermen. Near Civelj", "id": "4645021" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nAlthough these streams are of low outflow, there are also numerous wellsprings rising on both sides of the canyon at the river banks, with high-capacity discharge. Three large hydroelectric power stations operate in this section of the Neretva, between Jablanica and Mostar, namely Grabovica HPP, Salakovac HPP and Mostar HPP. Jablanica lake is a large artificial lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva expands into a wide valley. The river provided fertile, agricultural land before the lake flooded most of it. The lake", "id": "12890353" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nThe Jasenica (Serbian Cyrillic: Јасеница, ) is a river in central Serbia. It is long and is the left tributary of the Great Morava. This river gives the name to the surrounding region. The Jasenica originates from several streams, most notably the Đurinci (Cyrillic: Ђуринци) from Venčac mountain, and the Srebrenica (Cyrillic: Сребреница) from the northern slopes of the Rudnik mountain in central Serbia. At its origin, the river runs through the eastern border of the Kačer region. It flows to the southeast", "id": "3481500" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nin north Skopje, Macedonia. The streams Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is, after passing the Macedonian-Serbian border, known as the Binačka Morava. After 49 km it meets the Preševska Moravica at Bujanovac, and for the remainder, 246 km, flows as the South Morava. The South Morava belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and its own drainage area is 15,696 km², of which 1,237 km² is in Bulgaria (through its right tributary Nišava). Its average", "id": "15699472" }, { "contents": "Pešter\n\n\nRivers Uvac, Vapa, Jablanica and Grabovica flow through the plateau. In the geologic past, the field was a large lake, of which only a small Sjenica lake near the village of Tuzinje remained. The soil is mostly karst interspersed with pastures. Economy of the area relies primarily on cattle breeding, chiefly sheep. Pešter is famous for its dairy products, especially the \"Sjenica cheese\" (\"Sjenički sir\"), as well as lamb and prosciutto. The plateau is sparsely populated: most settlements are on the", "id": "16748290" }, { "contents": "Sredačka župa\n\n\nSredačka Župa (; \"county of Sredska\") is a remote geographical region, a valley, in southeastern Kosovo, below the Šar Mountains at the source of the Prizrenska Bistrica. The region, an oval basin, lies below the Šar Mountains, at the source, upper stream of the Prizrenska Bistrica (\"Prizren river\"). South of the region between the Prizren mountains and Koritnik mountain, lies the Gora region. It currently includes Sredska, Pousko, Jablanica, Lokvica, Rečane, Živinjane, Planjane, Nebregošte,", "id": "13372292" }, { "contents": "Binačka Morava\n\n\nBinačka Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Биначка Морава; ) or (\"Mirusha\") is a river which flows in southeastern Kosovo and North Macedonia. It flows generally in the southwest to northeast direction, from Macedonian border to Bujanovac, where, after 49 km, meets Preševska Moravica, to create South Morava. The river begins in the mountain of Skopska Crna Gora, in North Macedonia, north of its capital Skopje. Streams of Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is,", "id": "12867615" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwar, the Albanian population depending on the area reacted differently to incoming Serbian forces by either offering resistance or fleeing toward nearby mountains and Ottoman Kosovo. Although most of these Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces, a small presence was allowed to remain in the Jablanica valley where their descendants live today. Serbs from Lab moved to Serbia during and after the first round of hostilities in 1876, while incoming Albanian refugees thereafter 1878 repopulated their villages. Albanian refugees also settled alongside the north-eastern Ottoman-Serbian border, in urban areas", "id": "1099553" }, { "contents": "Banjska River\n\n\nThe Banjska River ( / \"Banjska reka\", \"Baths River\"), is a river in southern Serbia, the right tributary of Toplica in which it flows near Kuršumlija. It rises under the far south-eastern branch of Kopaonik. It is 22 km long, with a river basin area of 155 km². The average flow at the mouth is 0,7 m³/s. The valley of the river is mostly ravines, while the basin is rich in forest. The Kuršumlija-Kuršumlijska Banja-Prepolac Pass-Podujevo-", "id": "14979528" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nby a catastrophic flood. Then unregulated river Jablanica, swollen after a long rainy period, broke on June 6, spilled out of its banks and caused enormous material damage Lebane. Flood toll was paid and human victims (killed two people). After this tragic event, with financial help, Lebane begins to industrialize faster, and the process of industrialization has caused more versatile and faster development of the city. According to the 2011 census, the municipality has 22,000 inhabitants. The ethnic composition of the municipality: The following table", "id": "17523935" }, { "contents": "Čvrsnica\n\n\nČvrsnica () is a mountain in the Dinarides of Bosnia and Herzegovina, located in northern Herzegovina, most of the mountain is located in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton municipalities of Mostar and Jablanica while the smaller part of the mountain, around 10% is located in the municipality of Posušje. The highest peak (Pločno) is 2228 metres. Čvrsnica is surrounded by the river Neretva from the east (20 km), its tributaries Doljanka (18 km) from the north and Drežanka (19.8 km) from the south,", "id": "6129606" }, { "contents": "Myjava (river)\n\n\nThe Myjava River is a river in western Slovakia and for a small part in the Czech Republic and left tributary of the Morava River. It rises in the White Carpathians near the village of Nová Lhota in Moravia, but crosses the Czech-Slovak border shortly afterwards and flows in a southern direction until the town of Myjava, where it enters the Myjava Hills and turns west. Near Sobotište it flows into the Záhorie Lowland and turns south until the village of Jablonica, turning northwest and from Senica it flows west, passing through", "id": "2099838" }, { "contents": "West Morava\n\n\nSouth and Great Morava's meridian (south-to-north) flow, the West Morava runs in an opposed, latitudinal (west-to-east) direction, dividing the region of Šumadija of the central Serbia from the southern parts of the country. Due to the West Morava's direction, it flows between many mountains, regions and sub-regions: The West Morava river valley, Zapadno Pomoravlje, is economically the most developed of all three Morava river valleys. With the valley of the Ibar, the West", "id": "7786624" }, { "contents": "Ralja (river)\n\n\nThe Ralja () is a river in Šumadija region of Serbia, a 51 km long left tributary to the Jezava, a tributary of the Great Morava river. It also gives its name to the surrounding Šumadija's subregion of Ralja. The Ralja originates from the northern part of the Kosmaj mountain, north of the village of Velika Ivanča, in the Sopot municipality of the City of Belgrade. Almost from the source, the river valley is a route for the Belgrade-Niš railway. At the villages of Popović and Mali", "id": "2491229" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nBovan gorge carved by the river and is very popular local and regional tourist destination, especially among campers and fishermen, but the coastline is not put in order. The river continues to the south, in an inverse flow, and after the villages of Subotinac and Kraljevo, it empties into the Južna Morava at the town of Aleksinac. The lower section used to be a coal mining area too, just like the upper one, but the mines (Aleksinački Rudnik) are closed now. The Sokobanjska Moravica brlongs to the Black", "id": "1726358" }, { "contents": "Golijska Moravica\n\n\nThe Golijska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Голијска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in western Serbia. With a length of 98 km, it is the longer headstream of the Zapadna Morava (it forms it with the Đetinja), and thus, of the Velika Morava. Its name, Moravica, means \"little Morava\" in Serbian, and it also gives its name to the surrounding region and the modern Moravica District of Serbia. The Golijska Moravica originates from the western slopes of the Golija mountain and flows", "id": "5380325" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\n. The Nišava is not navigable. It is not only the longest tributary of the Južna Morava, but also the largest one in terms of discharge (36 km/s). It has many smaller tributaries, the most important being the Temštica from the right, and the Jerma (or Sukovska reka), Crvena reka, Koritnička reka and Kutinska reka from the left. The Nišava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia: the route follows the valleys of the Morava", "id": "9627078" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nThe Toplica (Serbian Cyrillic: Топлица, ) is a river in southern Serbia. The river is 130 km long and gives its name to the region it flows through, which constitutes most of the modern Toplica District of Serbia. The Toplica originates under the name of \"Duboka\" from the eastern slopes of the Kopaonik mountain, just south of the highest peak, Pančićev vrh. It flows to the southeast, on the western slopes of the Lepa Gora mountain, next to the villages of Merćez, Selova, Žuč,", "id": "19530451" }, { "contents": "Great Morava\n\n\nof the Velika Morava's right tributary Resava). The average discharge of the Velika Morava on its confluence with Danube is 255 m³/s (120 m³/s brought by Zapadna Morava, 100 m³/s by Južna Morava, and 35 m³/s amounted by the Velika Morava itself). Tributaries of the Velika Morava are short, the longest one being the Jasenica (79 km) and others rarely exceeding 50 km. Right tributaries are: Jovanovačka reka, Crnica, Ravanica, Resava and Resavica (or Resavčina). Left tributaries are more numerous,", "id": "2295702" }, { "contents": "Vevčani\n\n\nVevčani () is a village in the Republic of North Macedonia. It is the only settlement and seat of Vevčani Municipality. The village of Vevčani is found in the southwestern range at the foot of the Jablanica mountain range. It is situated from 800 – 950 metres above sea level. The village is located 14 km North-West of the town of Struga. The village is situated near the villages of Oktisi, Velešta, Podgorci, Gorna Belica with the Albanian border to the West of the village. The famous Vevčani", "id": "5042995" } ]
The Jablanica ( Serbian : Јабланица , ) is an river in southern Serbia . A left tributary of the South ( or Južna ) Morava river , it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia 's Jablanica District , with the region contributing about one third of the district 's area . The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain , near the village of Grbavce , on the administrative border of the Kosovo province . The area is rich in thermal springs , so several [START_ENT] spas [END_ENT] are located near the river : Stara Banja , Ravna Banja and Sijarina with popular Sijarinska Banja . At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary Čokotinska reka ( Cyrillic : Чокотинска река ) , turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point . The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the and Radan mountains , in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the in Kosovo . The river flows eastward , passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo , before reaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac , part of the depression of Leskovac , which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava . In the region , near Lebane , a famed archeological find of ( Iustiniana Prima ) is located . The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo , Vranovce , Bošnjace , Turekovac and Stopanje , reaches Vinarce , the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac , and turns north . First it flows parallel to the Veternica river , to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje , then parallel to the Južna Morava . After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava . From Pečenjevce , a parallel flow ( canal ) begins , connecting the Jablanica and s , some 15 km to the north . Through Južna Morava , the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin , draining an area of 895 km ² itself . It 's not navigable and has an average discharge of 6 m ³ / s , which in rainy years grows much higher , so the river floods its valley causing lots of material damage . The name of the river , Jablanica , in Serbian means the
1a768872-7066-450f-b637-04f2ac4bcc8e_river:6
[{"answer": "Destination spa", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "4220024", "title": "Destination spa"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nreaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac, part of the depression of Leskovac, which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. In the region, near Lebane, a famed archeological find of Caričin grad (\"Iustiniana Prima\") is located. The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo, Vranovce, Bošnjace, Turekovac and Stopanje, reaches Vinarce, the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac", "id": "3481303" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\n, and turns north. First it flows parallel to the Veternica river, to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje, then parallel to the Južna Morava. After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava. From Pečenjevce, a parallel flow (canal) begins, connecting the Jablanica and Toplica rivers, some 15 km to the north. Through Južna Morava, the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, draining an area of itself. It's not navigable", "id": "3481304" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\npopular Sijarinska Banja. At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary \"Čokotinska reka\" (Cyrillic: \"Чокотинска река\"), turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point. The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the Majdan and Radan mountains, in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the District of Priština in Kosovo. The river flows eastward, passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo, before", "id": "3481302" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nThe Jablanica (, ) is an river in southern Serbia. A left tributary of the South (or Južna) Morava river, it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia's Jablanica District, with the region contributing about one third of the district's area. The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain, near the village of Grbavce, on the border with Kosovo. The area is rich in thermal springs, so several spas are located near the river: Stara Banja, Ravna Banja and Sijarina with", "id": "3481301" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nJablanica with third parallel flow, the \"Sušica\", being formed in between. Settlements include many small villages, like Vina, Bukova Gora, Miroševce, Žabljane, Beli Potok and Strojkovce. In the Leskovac field, the river gently turns north, receives the Sušica from the left and reaches the town of Leskovac. The Veternica continues northward, being connected to the Jablanica river by the canal at the village of Bogojevce, before it empties into the Južna Morava. The Veternica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its", "id": "11539775" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nThe Veternica (Serbian Cyrillic: Ветерница, ) is a river in southern Serbia, a 75 km long left tributary to the Južna Morava, which gives the name to the region surrounding its valley. The Veternica originates from the Grot peak, the southernmost part of the Kukavica mountain. Four smaller streams meet at the village of Vlase and continue to the north as the Veternica. The river flows next to the villages of Golemo Selo, Oštra Glava and Gagince, where it flows parallel to the Jablanica river. As the Veternica", "id": "11539773" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nbends to the northeast, it enters the low Veternica region, part of the Leskovac field in the composite valley of the Južna Morava. Small region, located between the Kukavica mountain on the south and the Jablanica region on the north, is divided in two micro-regions, upper one being centered on the small town of Vučje (which is not located on the river itself) while the center of the lower micro-region is the town of Leskovac. As it enters the region, the Veternica furthers away from the", "id": "11539774" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nthe west, Kukavica and Čemernik in the south and Babička Gora, Seličevica and Suva Planina to the east. The largest river in the region of Leskovac is the South Morava River, which flows south to north. Tributaries of the South Morava are: the Vlasina river, which collects water from Lake Vlasina and flows through Crna Trava and Vlasotince; the Veternica river, which flows through Leskovac; the Jablanica river, which springs from the foot of Goljak and flows through Medveđa and Lebane; the Pusta (Deserted) river,", "id": "2857704" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nof 590 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and is not navigable. The region of Pusta Reka mostly correspondence with the river's watershed. It is located between the Pasjača mountain and lower Toplica region (on the north), the Southern Pomoravlje (Field of Leskovac, on the east), the Jablanica region (on the south) and the Radan mountain (on the west). The region is an agricultural area, almost without any industry, except for some smaller facilities in regional center, Bojnik", "id": "12523581" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nof Podina, Voljčince, Badnjevac and the smaller regional center Žitorađa. After the Toplica reaches municipal center of Doljevac, it enters the most densely populated part of the south Pomoravlje, turns north and flows into the Južna Morava at the village of Orljane, across the medieval ruins of Kurvin grad, as Južna Morava's longest left tributary. The Toplica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its own drainage area of 2,217 km². The river is not navigable. The river valley is a major traffic route in southern Serbia as", "id": "19530454" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nThe Sokobanjska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Сокобањска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in central eastern Serbia, a 58 km-long right tributary to the Južna Morava river. The Sokobanjska Moravica originates from the eastern slopes of the Devica mountain, near the village of Skrobnica. The river flows to the north, turns westward at the village of Levovik and enters the Banja region. The rivers flows between the northern slopes of the Devica and Ozren mountains (on the south) and southern slopes of the Rtanj mountain", "id": "1726356" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\nmouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. As the wider Jabllanica region, Medveđa also had an Albanian majority. These Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces in a way that today would be characterized as ethnic cleansing. Due to depopulation and economic considerations some small numbers of Albanians were allowed to stay and return though not to their previous settlements and instead were designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of", "id": "7117787" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\n, a notable Muslim population existed in the districts of Niš, Pirot, Vranje, Leskovac, Prokuplje and Kuršumlija. The rural parts of Toplica, Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the", "id": "1099558" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nthe southernmost slopes of the Suva Planina and Babička Gora mountains, it reaches the town of Vlasotince and western parts of the low Leskovac field, part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. After the villages of Batulovce and Stajkovce, the Vlasina empties into the Južna Morava, east of the Leskovac's eastern suburb of Mrštane. The Vlasina drains an area of 991 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin and it is not navigable. On 26 June 1988, after a period of heavy rains, Vlasina was a", "id": "14981332" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nThe Pusta River ( / \"Pusta reka\", \"Desolate River\") is a river in southern Serbia, a 71-km long left tributary to the South Morava. It also gives the name to the Pusta Reka region in its valley. The river originates northeast of Prolom Banja, near the Sokolovica village, on the northern tip of the Radan mountain, as the \"Golema River\" (\"Big River\"). It flows eastward, between the mountains of Radan (to the south) and Pasjača (to the", "id": "12523579" }, { "contents": "Persecution of Muslims during Ottoman contraction\n\n\nReka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the Turks were of Albanian origin. The Muslims in the cities of Niš and Pirot were Turkish-speaking; Vranje and Leskovac were Turkish- and Albanian-speaking; Prokuplje", "id": "8891598" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nvalley between Konjic and Jablanica, known simply as \"Neretva\" since Middle Ages, the new point for hydrographical division became dam of the Jablanica HPP where also is a place of confluence of the rivers Neretva and Rama. Here the Neretva river suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before it reach town of Jablanica. From this point it turns again toward south and enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes of the mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica", "id": "12890350" }, { "contents": "Rama (Neretva)\n\n\nRama is a river in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a major tributary of the Neretva. It joins it from the right by discharging into Neretva's artificial reservoir, Jablaničko lake, at place called Marina Pećina, near village of Gračac, between location of underground powerhouse of Rama Hydroelectric Power Station and Jablanica Dam, depending on water level in Jablaničko lake, some 15 kilometers upstream from Jablanica. The Rama flows through municipalities of Prozor-Rama and Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, while its headwaters together with wellsprings in the region of", "id": "3052779" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\nThe Kolubara (Serbian Cyrillic: Колубара, ), is a long river in western Serbia; it is an eastern, right tributary to the Sava river. Kolubara is formed by the two small rivers Obnica and Jablanica. \"Obnica\" is the river in Western Serbia that springs at the foot of the mountain Medvednik. It flows to the East, through the villages of Suvodanje, Bobova, Majinović, Pričević and Zlatarić, and at the city of Valjevo meets the river \"Jablanica\" and forms Kolubara. The Obnica is", "id": "20109582" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\ndating to the 4th century AD lay at various locations of the town, as it was a transitory zone of Upper Moesia; travel and postal stations are among the finds. Toponyms such as \"Arbanaška\" and \"Đjake\" shows an Albanian presence in the Toplica and Southern Morava regions (located north-east of contemporary Kosovo) before the expulsion of Albanians during 1877–1878 period. The rural parts of Jablanica valley and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river", "id": "7117786" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\naverage elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva again expands into a third and largest valley which provided fertile agricultural land before it was flooded by large artificial reservoir, Jablaničko Lake, formed after construction of a Jablanica Dam near town of Jablanica. The second section begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before reaches town of Jablanica, from which point turns again toward south. From", "id": "12890343" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nLebane () is a town and municipality located in Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 10,062 inhabitants, while the municipality has 20,000 inhabitants. The town is located at the confluence of the rivers Jablanica and Šumanska Reka, in the alluvial plain created by the former. Just northeast of the town a larger plain called Leskovačko polje extends toward the town of Leskovac, which is the district seat. The elevation of the town of Lebane is between 275.2 and 420 MASL.", "id": "17523929" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nRakic writes about it as a \"\"big village populated by Serbs, in a valley, on the river Jablanica, on its left bank.\"\" Only when Lebane got the role of Jablanica district headquarters, it began to gradually develop in a direction of a small town. The core of this small town was a series of houses along the Jablanica which is 45m wide here (as is even now); at the end of this series are the buildings of the Court and Municipality. The main feature of", "id": "17523931" }, { "contents": "Štulac (Lebane)\n\n\nthe village of Prekopčelica. The village is located on the valley slopes of the Caričin Potok creek. It is scattered between the altitudes of . It is situated in the wider Pusta Reka region. The village rests on the western slopes of the , which here divides the regions of Pusta Reka and Jablanica. On the west, the easternmost slopes of the Radan mountain begin. The village area covers . The Slavs settled in the area in the 7th century, centering around the ruins of Iustiniana Prima. Due to the lack of", "id": "11151840" }, { "contents": "Grdelica\n\n\nGrdelica () is a town in southern Serbia. It is situated in the Leskovac municipality, in the Jablanica District. The total population of the town was 3,194 people as of the 2011 census. For census purposes, Grdelica is divided into two adjacent parts, southern \"Grdelica town\" (\"Grdelica varoš\"; population 2,136) and northern \"Grdelica village\" (\"Grdelica selo\"; 1,058). Grdelica lies at the South Morava river, on the mountainous terrain at the entrance of the Grdelica Gorge. It", "id": "460756" }, { "contents": "Gornji Bučumet\n\n\nall settlements registered separately in the census. The three settlements lie in the South Morava basin, above the Jablanica river, and as such are located in the Upper Jablanica region. The highest mountain in Upper Bučumet is Paramid (853), with the mountain of Sv. Petar (1149) being located in Middle Bučumet. The three neighbourhoods of Bučumet are 470 to 853 metres above sea level. There is a medieval church built on the ruins of an older church. During the Toplica-Jablanica Operation (, ) in", "id": "12752738" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nthe huge floods of its daughter river. The South Morava has 157 tributaries. The most important left tributaries are: Jablanica, Veternica, Pusta reka and Toplica. Right tributaries are: Vrla, Vlasina, Nišava (the longest) and Sokobanjska Moravica. The South Morava has a significant potential for electricity production, and a huge hydroelectrical system (Vlasina- Vrla I-IV power stations) has been constructed in its drainage basin. To a certain extent, its waters are used for irrigation. The river valley's most important role", "id": "15699476" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nThe Rasina () is a river in south central Serbia. The long river flows through the Rasina region, gives its name to the modern Rasina District of Serbia, and flows into the Zapadna Morava near the city of Kruševac. Its historical name is Arsen (Αρσεγα). The Rasina springs from the southern slopes of the Goč mountain, near the village of Rašovka, southwest of the most famous Serbian spa, Vrnjačka Banja. The river originally flows to the southeast, around the mountains of Željin and Kopaonik, next to", "id": "209716" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nLeskovac (Serbian Cyrillic: Лесковац, ) is a city and the administrative center of the Jablanica District in southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the city urban area has 60,288 inhabitants, while the city administrative area has 144,206. Traces of life of the Brnjica culture (8th century BC) is seen at the Hisar Hill (Hisar Leskovac) that was protected by a deep moat with a palisade on its inner side, a fortification similar to that of another fortification on the site near Zlokućane in the Velika Morava basin", "id": "2857693" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nThe favorable location and the richness of nature made Jablanica valley important place since the earliest times. Traffic affordable and fertile, Leskovac valley has provided favorable conditions for the settlement of population. Archaeological findings, of which the most important are Hissar and Caričin grad (Iustiniana Prima) show that life in this area, continuously evolved from prehistoric man to date. First mention of Lebane as Hlebane dates back to 1512. Lebane is formed as a village of the same name after the liberation in 1878. Visiting Serbia in 1880s, M.", "id": "17523930" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nThe South Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Јужна Морава, Serbian Latin: \"Južna Morava\", ; ) is a river in eastern Kosovo and in southern Serbia, which represents the shorter headwater of Great Morava. Today, it is 295 km long, including its source river Binačka Morava. It flows generally in the south to north direction, from Macedonian border to Kosovo and onwards to Central Serbia, where it meets West Morava at Stalać, to create Great Morava. The river rises in the Skopska Crna Gora mountain", "id": "15699471" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\nis the Rzav's longer headstream. It originates from the Čigota mountain, eastern section of the Zlatibor mountain. The river originally flows northward, next to the villages of Vodice and Jokina Ćuprija, reaches the central section of the Zlatibor where it is dammed and creates the artificial Ribnica lake (surface area of 10 km²), after the nearby village of Ribnica. After the lake, the river sharply turns west and soon gets followed by the parallel stream of the \"Jablanica\" river. After crossing the village of Mokra Gora", "id": "11540154" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\n25 km long. Jablanica originates on the eastern slopes of the Jablanik mountain, just few kilometers away from Obnica. It curves around Parač mountain and next to the village of Balinović, before it meets Obnica in Valjevo. Jablanica is 21.5 km long. This is also the beginning of the long region of the Kolubara valley, divided in two large parts, referred to as Upper (\"gornja\") Kolubara and Lower (\"donja\") Kolubara (around the Belgrade's suburb of Obrenovac). At Valjevo, the", "id": "20109583" }, { "contents": "Jablanica District\n\n\nThe Jablanica District (, ) is one of nine administrative districts of Southern and Eastern Serbia. It expands in the south-eastern parts of Serbia. According to the 2011 census results, it has a population of 215,463 inhabitants. The administrative center of the district is the city of Leskovac. The district encompasses the municipalities of: According to the 2011 census results, the Jablanica Distract has a total population of 216,304 inhabitants. Ethnic composition of the Jablanica District: Famous cultural-historic monuments in this District are: the Roman", "id": "13223854" }, { "contents": "Kalna, Crna Trava\n\n\nKalna () is a small village in the Crna Trava municipality of the Jablanica District of Serbia. Kalna village is an old Serbian village, 35 km away from the Crna Trava. It is located between Tumba and Serbian-Bulgarian border, at an altitude of 500 to 1100 m. The total area is rural area of 7285 hectares. The Kalna can be reached from three directions: The road in this way was there since the Turkish rule. It was the shortest connection of Leskovac valley (Dubočica) to Sofia and Constantinople", "id": "11211518" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina-Neretva Canton\n\n\ntook place there during World War II and there is a large museum in Jablanica dedicated to these battles. The Neretva river runs through the cities of Konjic, Jablanica, Mostar and Čapljina before it flows through Croatia and into the Adriatic Sea. There are large lakes in the canton such as the Jablanica lake located around the city Jablanica. The southern most municipality in the canton is the Neum municipality which borders the Adriatic sea and the eastern most municipality is the Ravno municipality along the border with Croatia. Of the ten cantons comprising", "id": "3225485" }, { "contents": "Vardar Corps\n\n\nThe Vardar Corps was a corps of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland (JVuO) that operated on the left bank of the river Vardar during the World War II in Yugoslavia on the territory of modern-day North Macedonia and southern Serbia. Its commander was former Captain of the Royal Guard of the Royal Yugoslav Army Stojan Krstić. It consisted of four brigades with total number of 1,000 soldiers. Together with Jablanica Corps, South Morava Corps and Flying Corps it belonged under \"Mountain Staff 110\" () located in Sijarinska Banja", "id": "11325997" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nthe villages of Mitrovo Polje, Bzenica, Pleš, Jablanica, Grčak, Toskići, Budilovina and Milentija. When the Rasina reaches the small town of Brus, it enters the upper Rasina region and continues next to the villages of Tršanovci, Lepenac and Razbojna. At this point the river reaches the western side of the Veliki Jastrebac mountain, and makes a wide, elbow turn to the north. In this part of the course, the Rasina also makes a southeast border of the Aleksandrovačka Župa region. After the villages of Bogiše", "id": "209717" }, { "contents": "Doljanka\n\n\nDoljanka is a right tributary of Neretva river in North Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The length of Doljanka is around 18 km and reaches an altitude drop of about 400 m. Arises from sources scattered type under the far northeast slopes of Vran mountain on altitude of 1324 m. It runs through limestone canyon, which is high up to 1,200 m and flows through the village of Doljani. Doljanka flows into the Neretva River between Jablanica and Mostar, at an altitude of 300 m. It is also the connection over which trouts from the Neretva", "id": "8874715" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nValley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Albanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje", "id": "17667163" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n. The Neretva then flows northwest, through Konjic. It enters the Jablanica Reservoir (\"Jablaničko jezero\"), one of the largest in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake ends near the town of Jablanica. From here on, the Neretva turns southward, continuing to the Adriatic Sea. With the mountains lining its shores gradually receding, the Neretva enters a valley where the city of Mostar lies. It flows under the old bridge (\"Stari most\") and continues, now wider, toward the town of Čapljina and", "id": "3021139" }, { "contents": "Radan (mountain)\n\n\nRadan (Serbian Cyrillic: Радан) is a mountain in southern Serbia, near the town of Kuršumlija. Its highest peak, Šopot, has an elevation of 1,408 meters above sea level. Radan separates the valleys of the Toplica and Jablanica rivers. It is well covered with deciduous and evergreen forests. The best known spot on Radan is the Devil's Town – a peculiar rock formation consisting of hundreds of mushroom-like posts, located on its southern slopes. Near the Devil's Town there are ruins of Ivanova kula –", "id": "3957176" }, { "contents": "Crni Timok\n\n\nкотлина, \"depression of Crna Reka\"), populated with many smaller villages (Lukovo, Jablanica, Valakonje, Savinac, Gamzigrad, Zvezdan). At Gamzigrad there is also an important archeological site from Roman times. After a flow of 84 km, the Crni Timok reaches Zaječar, where it joins the Beli Timok River, forming the Veliki Timok River. It drains an area of . Early in its course it receives from the right the Radovanska, Suva, Velika, Salešča, Šarbanovačka, Jasenova, Bajnska and Suva", "id": "11459489" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (mountain range)\n\n\nJablanica ( ; ) is a mountain range in Southern and Southeastern Europe, stretching north-south direction across the border of Albania and the Republic of North Macedonia. The long mountain ridge is higher than for approximately , while the highest part, located in its very center, is Black Stone at high. Both countries have 50% of the mountain, Albania the west and North Macedonia the east. Jablanica Mountain contains many large mountain lakes. Shebenik mountain is located just to the west of Jablanica and give name to the Shebenik", "id": "3232652" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nThe Vlasina (Serbian Cyrillic: Власина), is a river in southeastern Serbia, a 70 km-long outflow of the Vlasina Lake and a right tributary to the Južna Morava, which also gives its name to the surrounding Vlasina region. The Vlasina flows out from the Vlasina Lake at an altitude of 1,213 m. Lake used to be a large, muddy peat bog, but in 1947-51 the Vlasina was dammed by the long, earth dam and the bog was turned into an artificial lake. The river flows to", "id": "14981330" }, { "contents": "Desná (Morava)\n\n\nDesná () is a river situated in Olomouc region of Czech republic, left tributary of the Morava. It is 43.4 km long, and its basin area is 338 km. The Desná river originates at the confluence of Hučivá Desná and Divoká Desná in Kouty nad Desnou, the village situated in deep valley of High Ash Mountains. The Desná then goes southwest through a valley toward the town of Šumperk. After approximately 43.4 km, the Desná flows into the Morava river near Postřelmov village.The mean annual discharge at its mouth", "id": "20977814" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nSerbian forces then headed south into the Morava valley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Muslims fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Turks fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Muslims departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessalonika. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in", "id": "1099566" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n, in the center of the region. Other larger towns include Trebinje, Stolac, Široki Brijeg, Posušje, Ljubuški, Grude, Konjic, and Čapljina. Borders between Herzegovina and Bosnia are unclear and often disputed. The upper flow of the Neretva River lies in northern Herzegovina, a heavily forested area with fast-flowing rivers and high mountains. Konjic and Jablanica lie in this area. The Neretva rises on Lebršnik Mountain, close to the Montenegro border, and as the river flows west, it enters Herzegovina. The entire", "id": "3021137" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nUpper Neretva, of the Neretva river from its source at 1,227 m.a.s.l. and headwaters gorge all the way to the town of Konjic is 90 km, flows from south to north - north-west as most of the Bosnia and Herzegovina rivers belonging to the Danube watershed, and cover some 1,390 km with average elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva briefly expanding into a wide valley which provides fertile agricultural land. There exists a large Jablaničko Lake, artificially formed after construction of dam near Jablanica. \"Second", "id": "16797216" }, { "contents": "Kubršnica\n\n\nThe Kubršnica (Serbian Cyrillic: Кубршница) is a river in Šumadija region of central Serbia, a 42 km-long left and the longest tributary to the Jasenica river. The Kubršnica originates from the Venčac mountain, in the Jasenica sub-region of Šumadija, in the wider area of the town of Aranđelovac. The terrain in the source area of the river is rich in marble and fireclay. The river flows to the east, next to the Aranđelovac's suburb of Banja and turns north near Topola. After the villages", "id": "5629731" }, { "contents": "Peć Bistrica\n\n\nkm-long, Rugovo glacier. The gorge is sparsely inhabited (the village of Mali Štupelj). As it comes out of the gorge, the Peć Bistrica reaches the town of Peć and enters the bottom of the Metohija depression through which it flows for the rest of its course. It runs parallel to the flows of the White Drin to the north and the Dečanska Bistrica to the south, next to the villages of Goraždevac, Lješane, Jablanica, Drenovce and Zaimovo, before it empties into the White Drin south of", "id": "15886949" }, { "contents": "Zlatibor\n\n\nsylvestris\" var. \"zlatiborica\" is a subspecies of pine originating from the mountain, and is endangered today. A hill by the name of Cigla\",\" located near the nearby village of Jablanica, still has some borderline markings of the Kingdom of Serbia, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Zlatibor itself is located in the northern part of the Stari Vlah region, a historical border region between Raška, Herzegovina and Bosnia. It spreads over an area of , in length, southeast to northwest, and up", "id": "3906304" }, { "contents": "Serbian Christmas traditions\n\n\nhousehold. The members of the group were called \"koledari\". The \"koleda\" was carried out from the Feast of Saint Ignatius Theophorus (five days before Christmas) up until the Epiphany. This custom was best preserved in the upper Pčinja District, and in the region around the River South Morava in the Jablanica District, southeastern Serbia. Regarded as pagan and discouraged by the Serbian Orthodox Church, the \"koleda\" ceased to be performed among most of the Serbs during the 19th and 20th centuries. \"Koledari\"", "id": "20573743" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwere designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of Medveđa have small numbers of Albanians and their descendants remained. This was due to a local Ottoman Albanian commander Shahid Pasha from the Jablanica area negotiating on good terms with Prince Milan and thereby guaranteeing their presence. Some other Albanians such as merchants attempted to remain in Niš, but they left after murders occurred and their property was sold off at low values. In 1879, some Albanian refugees from", "id": "1099570" }, { "contents": "Kosovo Pomoravlje\n\n\nThe region's largest cities are Gjilan and Bujanovac. The region is known as \"Kosovsko Pomoravlje\" (Косовско Поморавље, \"Morava Valley of Kosovo\") in Serbian and as Lugina e Anamoraves Binçes (\"Valley of Binač Morava\") in Albanian. Its name is derived from the Binač Morava River, which flows through northern Macedonia, eastern Kosovo and southern Serbia as part of the Great Morava river system. The region includes part of the valley and the Karadak and Koznik mountains. Gjilan has six municipalities and 287 smaller", "id": "13339352" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nAlbanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje, with the intention of then turning west and", "id": "17667142" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\nThe Resavčina (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресавчина) is a river in Serbia, a 32 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. It is sometimes also called \"Resavica\" or \"Resava\" (not to be confused with another Velika Morava's right tributary of Resava or its own tributary of Resavica). The Resavčina originates near the village of Proštinac in Svilajnac municipality. The river originally flows to the north, but soon turns west at the village of Dubnica and enters the western half of the Veliko Pomoravlje region", "id": "4886222" }, { "contents": "Ibar (river)\n\n\nThe Ibar, also known as the Ibër and Ibri (, , ), is a river that flows through eastern Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, with a total length of . The river begins in the Hajla mountain, in Rožaje, eastern Montenegro, and passes through Kosovo to flow into the West Morava river near Kraljevo, central Serbia. It belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area is , with an average discharge of 60 m³/s at the mouth. It is not navigable. The Ibar originates from", "id": "4536148" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Ilirska Bistrica\n\n\nJablanica (; ) is a settlement southeast of Ilirska Bistrica in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. Jablanica is the site of three known mass graves or unmarked graves from the end of the Second World War. They all contain the remains of German soldiers from the 97th Corps that were killed at the beginning of May 1945. The Mountain Fields Mass Grave (), also known as the Mountain Mass Grave (), lies in a meadow about 1.6 km northeast of Jablanica and contains the remains of 10 soldiers. The Solne Mass", "id": "16911511" }, { "contents": "Čezsoča\n\n\nČezsoča (; ) is a settlement in the Municipality of Bovec in the Littoral region of Slovenia. It includes the hamlets of Gorenja Vas (), Dolenja Vas (), Jablanica, Kršovec, and Na Glavi. Čezsoča lies in the valley on the left bank of the Soča River. The terrain then rises up towards Mount Polovnik (1,480 m). East of the settlement is Humčič Hill (810 m), behind which rises Mount Javoršček (1,557 m). Oplenk Creek flows through the village between Gorenja Vas and", "id": "14920585" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nJablanica, the Neretva enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching in depth. Three hydroelectric dams operate between Jablanica and Mostar. When the Neretva expands for the second and final time, it reaches its third section. This area is often colloquially called the \"\"Bosnian and Herzegovinian California\"\". The last of its course forms wide alluvial delta, before the river empties into the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Tatinac (also known as the", "id": "12890344" }, { "contents": "Jablaničko lake\n\n\nJablaničko lake () is a large artificially formed lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva briefly expands into a wide valley. River provided lot of fertile, agricultural land there, before lake flooded most of it. The lake was created in 1953 after construction of Jablanica Dam near Jablanica in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake has an irregular elongated shape. Its width varies along its length. The lake is a popular vacation destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Swimming, boating and especially fishing are popular activities", "id": "13828307" }, { "contents": "Jablanica Dam\n\n\nThe Jablanica Dam is an arch-gravity dam on the Neretva River about northeast of Jablanica in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The dam was constructed between 1947 and 1955 with the primary purpose of hydroelectric power production. The power station was commissioned in two stages, from 1955 until 1958. The first generator was commissioned in February 1955. An upgrade in 2008 increased the installed capacity of the power station from 150 MW to 180 MW. The dam's power station is located about to the southeast near Jablanica", "id": "854706" }, { "contents": "Jablanik\n\n\nJablanik (Serbian Cyrillic: Јабланик) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Valjevo. Its highest peak \"Jablanik\" has an elevation of 1,275 meters(10001020_ above sea level. Jablanik is located at the source of the river Jablanica. It is separated from nearby Medvednik mountain by high pass Stolica, while the Debelo Brdo saddle separates it from Povlen in the southeast. The highest peak has the same name as the mountain itself - Jablanik, and is 1,275 m high. The hills around the peak are mainly", "id": "366162" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\nThe Nišava or Nishava (Bulgarian and , ) is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia, a right tributary, and with a length of 218 km also the longest one, of the South Morava. The Nišava originates in western Bulgaria, in the Stara Planina mountains (east of Kom Peak) near the village of Gintsi. Its source is close to the Serbian border. It enters Serbia after 67 km of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries. Because it flows through Gintsi, the upper course of the river is", "id": "9627075" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nAfter Mramorac village, the Jasenica spills over in several parallel flows, which continue until its confluence. After the Pridvorica and Vodice villages (on different arms of the river), the Jasenica reaches the town of Smederevska Palanka, the most populous settlement in its valley. This is also where the Kubršnica, its main tributary, flows into it from the left. The Jasenica then gently bends to the east, flowing into the Great Morava near the village of Veliko Orašje (the southern arm of the river flows through the town", "id": "3481502" }, { "contents": "Gruža (river)\n\n\nThe Gruža (Serbian Cyrillic: Гружа, ) is a river in central Serbia. The river is a 62 km long left tributary to the Zapadna Morava. The Gruža originates in the central part of the Rudnik mountain, right under the mountain's main settlement, the village of Rudnik, northeast of the town of Gornji Milanovac, central Serbia. The river flows south next to the village of Majdan, around the Rudnik mountain into the Takovo region and at the village of Nevade, just few kilometers away from Gornji Milanovac,", "id": "10971320" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\n(hamlet Panjak) on the Serbian-Bosnian border Crni Rzav meets the Jablanica river at the village Gornje Vardište and finally the river Beli Rzav at the village of Donje Vardište. The Rzav continues as the natural extension of the Beli Rzav, but since the Black Rzav is longer, the latter is considered to be the main headstream. It floes between the southernmost part of the Zvijezda mountain (\"Ponos\" peak) from the north and the Suha Gora mountain from the south, next to the villages of Prosjek (and", "id": "11540155" }, { "contents": "Ub (river)\n\n\nThe Ub (Serbian Cyrillic: Уб) is a river in western Serbia, a 57 km-long right and longest tributary to Tamnava river. The Ub originates from the Vlašić mountain in Podgorina region of west Serbia, near the village of Kasapo. From its source to the mouth, the river flows to the east, parallel to the river Tamnava, which it will eventually join. The villages located in the upper section of the river's flow are Družetić, Pambukovica and Čučuge, where the Ub slightly turns to the", "id": "2261401" }, { "contents": "Olomouc Region\n\n\nof the region is situated on the water level of the Morava River near to Kojetín in the Přerov District (190 m above sea level). The Morava river flows through the region and the majority of the region's territory belongs to Morava’s drainage basin. A small northern part of the region belongs to the drainage basin of Odra River, which flows to the Baltic Sea. The Olomouc Region offers a great variety of natural points of interest. Protected landscape area of the Jeseníky mountains offers a number of scenic places such", "id": "11419394" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina\n\n\nJablanica is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is situated on the Neretva river and Jablanica lake. The municipality of Jablanica is a major tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The municipality offer a wide variety of activities. The surrounding mountains such as Plasa, Čvrsnica and Prenj offer both hunting grounds and a variety of hiking trails. One popular hiking destination is \"Hajdučka Vrata\", a natural wonder, the product of wind", "id": "9009264" }, { "contents": "Krupá (Morava)\n\n\nKrupá (German: Graupa Bach) is a creek in Šumperk District, Moravia, left tributary of the Morava. Its length is 19,2 km and its drainage basin covers 112.7 km2. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 4.48 m³/s. The Krupá originates in Czech part of the Śnieżnik Mountains, 400 meters above sea level. The Krupá then goes south toward the town of Staré Město. It flows into the Morava river near Hanušovice town. River keeps its natural character with meanders and original riversides. A river bottom is", "id": "1745557" }, { "contents": "Oskava (river)\n\n\nOskava is a river in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic, left tributary of the Morava river. Its length is 50.3 km and its drainage basin covers 569 km. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 3.53 m/s. The Oskava originates from southeast slope of Kamenná hora in Hrubý Jeseník, 215 meters above sea level. The river is surrounded by woods in upper reaches, flows through hills of Nízký Jeseník in middle reaches and its lower reaches is situated in swampy floodplain of Litovelské Pomoraví Protected Landscape Area.", "id": "8538845" }, { "contents": "Crna Trava\n\n\nCrna Trava ( ) is a village and municipality located in the Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to 2011 census, the population of the village is 434 inhabitants, while population of the municipality is 1,663. This is the smallest by population and poorest municipality in Serbia. Crna Trava is famous for its migrant builders, who are considered the best in the region and are colloquially described as \"building half of Yugoslavia\". The name of the village in Serbian translates to \"Black Grass\". The origin of the name", "id": "18032485" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\n. At the village of Kušiljevo, the river receives the small stream of \"Beljeva\" from the left and turns northward, which is the general direction of its course for the rest of the flow. The river flows parallel to the Velika Morava river as its satellite flow, in the Morava's floodplain, so there are no settlements on the Resavica itself, but several large villages are located in its valley (Porodin, Žabari, Simićevo, Aleksandrovac Požarevački, Vlaški Do, Poljana), all of them located on the", "id": "4886223" }, { "contents": "Lugomir\n\n\nThe Lugomir (Serbian Cyrillic: Лугомир) is a river in central Serbia, a 57 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. The Lugomir originates from two headstreams, the Dulenska reka and the Županjevačka reka. The shorter headstream of Županjevačka reka (Cyrillic: \"Жупањевачка река\") originates from the mountain of Gledićke planine in southern Šumadija region of central Serbia. Its spring is just some 500 m away from the source of Lugomir's another headstream, the Dulenska reka. The river first flows to the east", "id": "5130918" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\ncities in Serbia, 10 km after which the Nišava empties into the Južna Morava. However, with the rapid growth of Niš in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs, the banks of the Nišava are urbanized almost to its mouth. After being divided into districts in 1992, the Nišava District (with Niš as administrative center) is named after the river. The river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area covers 4,086 km, of which about 73% in Serbia, the rest in Bulgaria", "id": "9627077" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nsection\" begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama river between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes a southern course and enter a largest canyons of its course, running through steep slopes of magnificent mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching 800–1200 meters in depth. From here Neretva flows toward the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Jezernica (also Tatinac), the Gornji and Donji Krupac, the Ljuta-Dindolka, the Jesenica, the Bjelimićka Rijeka, the Slatinica, the Račica, the Rakitnica, the Konjička", "id": "16797217" }, { "contents": "Resava (river)\n\n\nThe Resava (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресава) is a river in central Serbia, a 65 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava. It also gives the name to the surrounding Resava region, the Resava Monastery, the coal mines in its valley and a popular tourist destination of Resava Cave. The Resava originates from the Homolje region in eastern Serbia. It springs out at an altitude of 1,100 m and flows westward between the mountains of Beljanica (on the north) and Kučaj (on the south). In its", "id": "15040274" }, { "contents": "A1 motorway (Serbia)\n\n\nJužna Morava river. Southern section (Niš–Leskovac–Vranje–Macedonian border) consists of 128 km that are in service, while additional 26 km are under construction. Construction of southern section has been completed by May 2019, and last sections opened for traffic on 18 May 2019: Highway passes through valley of South Morava, passes west of Niš, by Merošina and Leskovac, and after Grdelica built highway ends. 26 kilometers of highway under construction passes through Grdelica gorge, very difficult terrain. This sections is often considered", "id": "1785427" }, { "contents": "Čivelj\n\n\nČivelj is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in the municipality of Jablanica, Herzegovina-Neretva Canton, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1991, the village had six inhabitants, all of whom were Muslims. In 2013, Čivelj had 10 inhabitants. Tourism is solid. Civelj is placed 8 kilometres from Jablanica and it is placed on Jablanica lake. In lake there are 5 types of fishes including the most popular \"pastrmka\". The village was found in 1911. by local fishermen. Near Civelj", "id": "4645021" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nAlthough these streams are of low outflow, there are also numerous wellsprings rising on both sides of the canyon at the river banks, with high-capacity discharge. Three large hydroelectric power stations operate in this section of the Neretva, between Jablanica and Mostar, namely Grabovica HPP, Salakovac HPP and Mostar HPP. Jablanica lake is a large artificial lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva expands into a wide valley. The river provided fertile, agricultural land before the lake flooded most of it. The lake", "id": "12890353" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nThe Jasenica (Serbian Cyrillic: Јасеница, ) is a river in central Serbia. It is long and is the left tributary of the Great Morava. This river gives the name to the surrounding region. The Jasenica originates from several streams, most notably the Đurinci (Cyrillic: Ђуринци) from Venčac mountain, and the Srebrenica (Cyrillic: Сребреница) from the northern slopes of the Rudnik mountain in central Serbia. At its origin, the river runs through the eastern border of the Kačer region. It flows to the southeast", "id": "3481500" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nin north Skopje, Macedonia. The streams Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is, after passing the Macedonian-Serbian border, known as the Binačka Morava. After 49 km it meets the Preševska Moravica at Bujanovac, and for the remainder, 246 km, flows as the South Morava. The South Morava belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and its own drainage area is 15,696 km², of which 1,237 km² is in Bulgaria (through its right tributary Nišava). Its average", "id": "15699472" }, { "contents": "Pešter\n\n\nRivers Uvac, Vapa, Jablanica and Grabovica flow through the plateau. In the geologic past, the field was a large lake, of which only a small Sjenica lake near the village of Tuzinje remained. The soil is mostly karst interspersed with pastures. Economy of the area relies primarily on cattle breeding, chiefly sheep. Pešter is famous for its dairy products, especially the \"Sjenica cheese\" (\"Sjenički sir\"), as well as lamb and prosciutto. The plateau is sparsely populated: most settlements are on the", "id": "16748290" }, { "contents": "Sredačka župa\n\n\nSredačka Župa (; \"county of Sredska\") is a remote geographical region, a valley, in southeastern Kosovo, below the Šar Mountains at the source of the Prizrenska Bistrica. The region, an oval basin, lies below the Šar Mountains, at the source, upper stream of the Prizrenska Bistrica (\"Prizren river\"). South of the region between the Prizren mountains and Koritnik mountain, lies the Gora region. It currently includes Sredska, Pousko, Jablanica, Lokvica, Rečane, Živinjane, Planjane, Nebregošte,", "id": "13372292" }, { "contents": "Binačka Morava\n\n\nBinačka Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Биначка Морава; ) or (\"Mirusha\") is a river which flows in southeastern Kosovo and North Macedonia. It flows generally in the southwest to northeast direction, from Macedonian border to Bujanovac, where, after 49 km, meets Preševska Moravica, to create South Morava. The river begins in the mountain of Skopska Crna Gora, in North Macedonia, north of its capital Skopje. Streams of Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is,", "id": "12867615" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwar, the Albanian population depending on the area reacted differently to incoming Serbian forces by either offering resistance or fleeing toward nearby mountains and Ottoman Kosovo. Although most of these Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces, a small presence was allowed to remain in the Jablanica valley where their descendants live today. Serbs from Lab moved to Serbia during and after the first round of hostilities in 1876, while incoming Albanian refugees thereafter 1878 repopulated their villages. Albanian refugees also settled alongside the north-eastern Ottoman-Serbian border, in urban areas", "id": "1099553" }, { "contents": "Banjska River\n\n\nThe Banjska River ( / \"Banjska reka\", \"Baths River\"), is a river in southern Serbia, the right tributary of Toplica in which it flows near Kuršumlija. It rises under the far south-eastern branch of Kopaonik. It is 22 km long, with a river basin area of 155 km². The average flow at the mouth is 0,7 m³/s. The valley of the river is mostly ravines, while the basin is rich in forest. The Kuršumlija-Kuršumlijska Banja-Prepolac Pass-Podujevo-", "id": "14979528" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nby a catastrophic flood. Then unregulated river Jablanica, swollen after a long rainy period, broke on June 6, spilled out of its banks and caused enormous material damage Lebane. Flood toll was paid and human victims (killed two people). After this tragic event, with financial help, Lebane begins to industrialize faster, and the process of industrialization has caused more versatile and faster development of the city. According to the 2011 census, the municipality has 22,000 inhabitants. The ethnic composition of the municipality: The following table", "id": "17523935" }, { "contents": "Čvrsnica\n\n\nČvrsnica () is a mountain in the Dinarides of Bosnia and Herzegovina, located in northern Herzegovina, most of the mountain is located in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton municipalities of Mostar and Jablanica while the smaller part of the mountain, around 10% is located in the municipality of Posušje. The highest peak (Pločno) is 2228 metres. Čvrsnica is surrounded by the river Neretva from the east (20 km), its tributaries Doljanka (18 km) from the north and Drežanka (19.8 km) from the south,", "id": "6129606" }, { "contents": "Myjava (river)\n\n\nThe Myjava River is a river in western Slovakia and for a small part in the Czech Republic and left tributary of the Morava River. It rises in the White Carpathians near the village of Nová Lhota in Moravia, but crosses the Czech-Slovak border shortly afterwards and flows in a southern direction until the town of Myjava, where it enters the Myjava Hills and turns west. Near Sobotište it flows into the Záhorie Lowland and turns south until the village of Jablonica, turning northwest and from Senica it flows west, passing through", "id": "2099838" }, { "contents": "West Morava\n\n\nSouth and Great Morava's meridian (south-to-north) flow, the West Morava runs in an opposed, latitudinal (west-to-east) direction, dividing the region of Šumadija of the central Serbia from the southern parts of the country. Due to the West Morava's direction, it flows between many mountains, regions and sub-regions: The West Morava river valley, Zapadno Pomoravlje, is economically the most developed of all three Morava river valleys. With the valley of the Ibar, the West", "id": "7786624" }, { "contents": "Ralja (river)\n\n\nThe Ralja () is a river in Šumadija region of Serbia, a 51 km long left tributary to the Jezava, a tributary of the Great Morava river. It also gives its name to the surrounding Šumadija's subregion of Ralja. The Ralja originates from the northern part of the Kosmaj mountain, north of the village of Velika Ivanča, in the Sopot municipality of the City of Belgrade. Almost from the source, the river valley is a route for the Belgrade-Niš railway. At the villages of Popović and Mali", "id": "2491229" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nBovan gorge carved by the river and is very popular local and regional tourist destination, especially among campers and fishermen, but the coastline is not put in order. The river continues to the south, in an inverse flow, and after the villages of Subotinac and Kraljevo, it empties into the Južna Morava at the town of Aleksinac. The lower section used to be a coal mining area too, just like the upper one, but the mines (Aleksinački Rudnik) are closed now. The Sokobanjska Moravica brlongs to the Black", "id": "1726358" }, { "contents": "Golijska Moravica\n\n\nThe Golijska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Голијска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in western Serbia. With a length of 98 km, it is the longer headstream of the Zapadna Morava (it forms it with the Đetinja), and thus, of the Velika Morava. Its name, Moravica, means \"little Morava\" in Serbian, and it also gives its name to the surrounding region and the modern Moravica District of Serbia. The Golijska Moravica originates from the western slopes of the Golija mountain and flows", "id": "5380325" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\n. The Nišava is not navigable. It is not only the longest tributary of the Južna Morava, but also the largest one in terms of discharge (36 km/s). It has many smaller tributaries, the most important being the Temštica from the right, and the Jerma (or Sukovska reka), Crvena reka, Koritnička reka and Kutinska reka from the left. The Nišava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia: the route follows the valleys of the Morava", "id": "9627078" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nThe Toplica (Serbian Cyrillic: Топлица, ) is a river in southern Serbia. The river is 130 km long and gives its name to the region it flows through, which constitutes most of the modern Toplica District of Serbia. The Toplica originates under the name of \"Duboka\" from the eastern slopes of the Kopaonik mountain, just south of the highest peak, Pančićev vrh. It flows to the southeast, on the western slopes of the Lepa Gora mountain, next to the villages of Merćez, Selova, Žuč,", "id": "19530451" }, { "contents": "Great Morava\n\n\nof the Velika Morava's right tributary Resava). The average discharge of the Velika Morava on its confluence with Danube is 255 m³/s (120 m³/s brought by Zapadna Morava, 100 m³/s by Južna Morava, and 35 m³/s amounted by the Velika Morava itself). Tributaries of the Velika Morava are short, the longest one being the Jasenica (79 km) and others rarely exceeding 50 km. Right tributaries are: Jovanovačka reka, Crnica, Ravanica, Resava and Resavica (or Resavčina). Left tributaries are more numerous,", "id": "2295702" }, { "contents": "Vevčani\n\n\nVevčani () is a village in the Republic of North Macedonia. It is the only settlement and seat of Vevčani Municipality. The village of Vevčani is found in the southwestern range at the foot of the Jablanica mountain range. It is situated from 800 – 950 metres above sea level. The village is located 14 km North-West of the town of Struga. The village is situated near the villages of Oktisi, Velešta, Podgorci, Gorna Belica with the Albanian border to the West of the village. The famous Vevčani", "id": "5042995" } ]
The Jablanica ( Serbian : Јабланица , ) is an river in southern Serbia . A left tributary of the South ( or Južna ) Morava river , it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia 's Jablanica District , with the region contributing about one third of the district 's area . The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain , near the village of Grbavce , on the administrative border of the Kosovo province . The area is rich in thermal springs , so several spas are located near the river : Stara Banja , Ravna Banja and Sijarina with popular [START_ENT] Sijarinska Banja [END_ENT] . At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary Čokotinska reka ( Cyrillic : Чокотинска река ) , turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point . The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the and Radan mountains , in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the in Kosovo . The river flows eastward , passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo , before reaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac , part of the depression of Leskovac , which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava . In the region , near Lebane , a famed archeological find of ( Iustiniana Prima ) is located . The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo , Vranovce , Bošnjace , Turekovac and Stopanje , reaches Vinarce , the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac , and turns north . First it flows parallel to the Veternica river , to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje , then parallel to the Južna Morava . After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava . From Pečenjevce , a parallel flow ( canal ) begins , connecting the Jablanica and s , some 15 km to the north . Through Južna Morava , the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin , draining an area of 895 km ² itself . It 's not navigable and has an average discharge of 6 m ³ / s , which in rainy years grows much higher , so the river floods its valley causing lots of material damage . The name of the river , Jablanica , in Serbian means the
20cc4fb7-c4cb-4205-b2d9-dff7198367e1_river:7
[{"answer": "Sijarinska Banja", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "7394175", "title": "Sijarinska Banja"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nreaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac, part of the depression of Leskovac, which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. In the region, near Lebane, a famed archeological find of Caričin grad (\"Iustiniana Prima\") is located. The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo, Vranovce, Bošnjace, Turekovac and Stopanje, reaches Vinarce, the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac", "id": "3481303" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\n, and turns north. First it flows parallel to the Veternica river, to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje, then parallel to the Južna Morava. After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava. From Pečenjevce, a parallel flow (canal) begins, connecting the Jablanica and Toplica rivers, some 15 km to the north. Through Južna Morava, the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, draining an area of itself. It's not navigable", "id": "3481304" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\npopular Sijarinska Banja. At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary \"Čokotinska reka\" (Cyrillic: \"Чокотинска река\"), turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point. The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the Majdan and Radan mountains, in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the District of Priština in Kosovo. The river flows eastward, passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo, before", "id": "3481302" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nThe Jablanica (, ) is an river in southern Serbia. A left tributary of the South (or Južna) Morava river, it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia's Jablanica District, with the region contributing about one third of the district's area. The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain, near the village of Grbavce, on the border with Kosovo. The area is rich in thermal springs, so several spas are located near the river: Stara Banja, Ravna Banja and Sijarina with", "id": "3481301" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nJablanica with third parallel flow, the \"Sušica\", being formed in between. Settlements include many small villages, like Vina, Bukova Gora, Miroševce, Žabljane, Beli Potok and Strojkovce. In the Leskovac field, the river gently turns north, receives the Sušica from the left and reaches the town of Leskovac. The Veternica continues northward, being connected to the Jablanica river by the canal at the village of Bogojevce, before it empties into the Južna Morava. The Veternica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its", "id": "11539775" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nThe Veternica (Serbian Cyrillic: Ветерница, ) is a river in southern Serbia, a 75 km long left tributary to the Južna Morava, which gives the name to the region surrounding its valley. The Veternica originates from the Grot peak, the southernmost part of the Kukavica mountain. Four smaller streams meet at the village of Vlase and continue to the north as the Veternica. The river flows next to the villages of Golemo Selo, Oštra Glava and Gagince, where it flows parallel to the Jablanica river. As the Veternica", "id": "11539773" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nbends to the northeast, it enters the low Veternica region, part of the Leskovac field in the composite valley of the Južna Morava. Small region, located between the Kukavica mountain on the south and the Jablanica region on the north, is divided in two micro-regions, upper one being centered on the small town of Vučje (which is not located on the river itself) while the center of the lower micro-region is the town of Leskovac. As it enters the region, the Veternica furthers away from the", "id": "11539774" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nthe west, Kukavica and Čemernik in the south and Babička Gora, Seličevica and Suva Planina to the east. The largest river in the region of Leskovac is the South Morava River, which flows south to north. Tributaries of the South Morava are: the Vlasina river, which collects water from Lake Vlasina and flows through Crna Trava and Vlasotince; the Veternica river, which flows through Leskovac; the Jablanica river, which springs from the foot of Goljak and flows through Medveđa and Lebane; the Pusta (Deserted) river,", "id": "2857704" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nof 590 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and is not navigable. The region of Pusta Reka mostly correspondence with the river's watershed. It is located between the Pasjača mountain and lower Toplica region (on the north), the Southern Pomoravlje (Field of Leskovac, on the east), the Jablanica region (on the south) and the Radan mountain (on the west). The region is an agricultural area, almost without any industry, except for some smaller facilities in regional center, Bojnik", "id": "12523581" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nof Podina, Voljčince, Badnjevac and the smaller regional center Žitorađa. After the Toplica reaches municipal center of Doljevac, it enters the most densely populated part of the south Pomoravlje, turns north and flows into the Južna Morava at the village of Orljane, across the medieval ruins of Kurvin grad, as Južna Morava's longest left tributary. The Toplica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its own drainage area of 2,217 km². The river is not navigable. The river valley is a major traffic route in southern Serbia as", "id": "19530454" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nThe Sokobanjska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Сокобањска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in central eastern Serbia, a 58 km-long right tributary to the Južna Morava river. The Sokobanjska Moravica originates from the eastern slopes of the Devica mountain, near the village of Skrobnica. The river flows to the north, turns westward at the village of Levovik and enters the Banja region. The rivers flows between the northern slopes of the Devica and Ozren mountains (on the south) and southern slopes of the Rtanj mountain", "id": "1726356" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\nmouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. As the wider Jabllanica region, Medveđa also had an Albanian majority. These Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces in a way that today would be characterized as ethnic cleansing. Due to depopulation and economic considerations some small numbers of Albanians were allowed to stay and return though not to their previous settlements and instead were designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of", "id": "7117787" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\n, a notable Muslim population existed in the districts of Niš, Pirot, Vranje, Leskovac, Prokuplje and Kuršumlija. The rural parts of Toplica, Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the", "id": "1099558" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nthe southernmost slopes of the Suva Planina and Babička Gora mountains, it reaches the town of Vlasotince and western parts of the low Leskovac field, part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. After the villages of Batulovce and Stajkovce, the Vlasina empties into the Južna Morava, east of the Leskovac's eastern suburb of Mrštane. The Vlasina drains an area of 991 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin and it is not navigable. On 26 June 1988, after a period of heavy rains, Vlasina was a", "id": "14981332" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nThe Pusta River ( / \"Pusta reka\", \"Desolate River\") is a river in southern Serbia, a 71-km long left tributary to the South Morava. It also gives the name to the Pusta Reka region in its valley. The river originates northeast of Prolom Banja, near the Sokolovica village, on the northern tip of the Radan mountain, as the \"Golema River\" (\"Big River\"). It flows eastward, between the mountains of Radan (to the south) and Pasjača (to the", "id": "12523579" }, { "contents": "Persecution of Muslims during Ottoman contraction\n\n\nReka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the Turks were of Albanian origin. The Muslims in the cities of Niš and Pirot were Turkish-speaking; Vranje and Leskovac were Turkish- and Albanian-speaking; Prokuplje", "id": "8891598" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nvalley between Konjic and Jablanica, known simply as \"Neretva\" since Middle Ages, the new point for hydrographical division became dam of the Jablanica HPP where also is a place of confluence of the rivers Neretva and Rama. Here the Neretva river suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before it reach town of Jablanica. From this point it turns again toward south and enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes of the mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica", "id": "12890350" }, { "contents": "Rama (Neretva)\n\n\nRama is a river in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a major tributary of the Neretva. It joins it from the right by discharging into Neretva's artificial reservoir, Jablaničko lake, at place called Marina Pećina, near village of Gračac, between location of underground powerhouse of Rama Hydroelectric Power Station and Jablanica Dam, depending on water level in Jablaničko lake, some 15 kilometers upstream from Jablanica. The Rama flows through municipalities of Prozor-Rama and Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, while its headwaters together with wellsprings in the region of", "id": "3052779" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\nThe Kolubara (Serbian Cyrillic: Колубара, ), is a long river in western Serbia; it is an eastern, right tributary to the Sava river. Kolubara is formed by the two small rivers Obnica and Jablanica. \"Obnica\" is the river in Western Serbia that springs at the foot of the mountain Medvednik. It flows to the East, through the villages of Suvodanje, Bobova, Majinović, Pričević and Zlatarić, and at the city of Valjevo meets the river \"Jablanica\" and forms Kolubara. The Obnica is", "id": "20109582" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\ndating to the 4th century AD lay at various locations of the town, as it was a transitory zone of Upper Moesia; travel and postal stations are among the finds. Toponyms such as \"Arbanaška\" and \"Đjake\" shows an Albanian presence in the Toplica and Southern Morava regions (located north-east of contemporary Kosovo) before the expulsion of Albanians during 1877–1878 period. The rural parts of Jablanica valley and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river", "id": "7117786" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\naverage elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva again expands into a third and largest valley which provided fertile agricultural land before it was flooded by large artificial reservoir, Jablaničko Lake, formed after construction of a Jablanica Dam near town of Jablanica. The second section begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before reaches town of Jablanica, from which point turns again toward south. From", "id": "12890343" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nLebane () is a town and municipality located in Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 10,062 inhabitants, while the municipality has 20,000 inhabitants. The town is located at the confluence of the rivers Jablanica and Šumanska Reka, in the alluvial plain created by the former. Just northeast of the town a larger plain called Leskovačko polje extends toward the town of Leskovac, which is the district seat. The elevation of the town of Lebane is between 275.2 and 420 MASL.", "id": "17523929" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nRakic writes about it as a \"\"big village populated by Serbs, in a valley, on the river Jablanica, on its left bank.\"\" Only when Lebane got the role of Jablanica district headquarters, it began to gradually develop in a direction of a small town. The core of this small town was a series of houses along the Jablanica which is 45m wide here (as is even now); at the end of this series are the buildings of the Court and Municipality. The main feature of", "id": "17523931" }, { "contents": "Štulac (Lebane)\n\n\nthe village of Prekopčelica. The village is located on the valley slopes of the Caričin Potok creek. It is scattered between the altitudes of . It is situated in the wider Pusta Reka region. The village rests on the western slopes of the , which here divides the regions of Pusta Reka and Jablanica. On the west, the easternmost slopes of the Radan mountain begin. The village area covers . The Slavs settled in the area in the 7th century, centering around the ruins of Iustiniana Prima. Due to the lack of", "id": "11151840" }, { "contents": "Grdelica\n\n\nGrdelica () is a town in southern Serbia. It is situated in the Leskovac municipality, in the Jablanica District. The total population of the town was 3,194 people as of the 2011 census. For census purposes, Grdelica is divided into two adjacent parts, southern \"Grdelica town\" (\"Grdelica varoš\"; population 2,136) and northern \"Grdelica village\" (\"Grdelica selo\"; 1,058). Grdelica lies at the South Morava river, on the mountainous terrain at the entrance of the Grdelica Gorge. It", "id": "460756" }, { "contents": "Gornji Bučumet\n\n\nall settlements registered separately in the census. The three settlements lie in the South Morava basin, above the Jablanica river, and as such are located in the Upper Jablanica region. The highest mountain in Upper Bučumet is Paramid (853), with the mountain of Sv. Petar (1149) being located in Middle Bučumet. The three neighbourhoods of Bučumet are 470 to 853 metres above sea level. There is a medieval church built on the ruins of an older church. During the Toplica-Jablanica Operation (, ) in", "id": "12752738" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nthe huge floods of its daughter river. The South Morava has 157 tributaries. The most important left tributaries are: Jablanica, Veternica, Pusta reka and Toplica. Right tributaries are: Vrla, Vlasina, Nišava (the longest) and Sokobanjska Moravica. The South Morava has a significant potential for electricity production, and a huge hydroelectrical system (Vlasina- Vrla I-IV power stations) has been constructed in its drainage basin. To a certain extent, its waters are used for irrigation. The river valley's most important role", "id": "15699476" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nThe Rasina () is a river in south central Serbia. The long river flows through the Rasina region, gives its name to the modern Rasina District of Serbia, and flows into the Zapadna Morava near the city of Kruševac. Its historical name is Arsen (Αρσεγα). The Rasina springs from the southern slopes of the Goč mountain, near the village of Rašovka, southwest of the most famous Serbian spa, Vrnjačka Banja. The river originally flows to the southeast, around the mountains of Željin and Kopaonik, next to", "id": "209716" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nLeskovac (Serbian Cyrillic: Лесковац, ) is a city and the administrative center of the Jablanica District in southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the city urban area has 60,288 inhabitants, while the city administrative area has 144,206. Traces of life of the Brnjica culture (8th century BC) is seen at the Hisar Hill (Hisar Leskovac) that was protected by a deep moat with a palisade on its inner side, a fortification similar to that of another fortification on the site near Zlokućane in the Velika Morava basin", "id": "2857693" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nThe favorable location and the richness of nature made Jablanica valley important place since the earliest times. Traffic affordable and fertile, Leskovac valley has provided favorable conditions for the settlement of population. Archaeological findings, of which the most important are Hissar and Caričin grad (Iustiniana Prima) show that life in this area, continuously evolved from prehistoric man to date. First mention of Lebane as Hlebane dates back to 1512. Lebane is formed as a village of the same name after the liberation in 1878. Visiting Serbia in 1880s, M.", "id": "17523930" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nThe South Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Јужна Морава, Serbian Latin: \"Južna Morava\", ; ) is a river in eastern Kosovo and in southern Serbia, which represents the shorter headwater of Great Morava. Today, it is 295 km long, including its source river Binačka Morava. It flows generally in the south to north direction, from Macedonian border to Kosovo and onwards to Central Serbia, where it meets West Morava at Stalać, to create Great Morava. The river rises in the Skopska Crna Gora mountain", "id": "15699471" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\nis the Rzav's longer headstream. It originates from the Čigota mountain, eastern section of the Zlatibor mountain. The river originally flows northward, next to the villages of Vodice and Jokina Ćuprija, reaches the central section of the Zlatibor where it is dammed and creates the artificial Ribnica lake (surface area of 10 km²), after the nearby village of Ribnica. After the lake, the river sharply turns west and soon gets followed by the parallel stream of the \"Jablanica\" river. After crossing the village of Mokra Gora", "id": "11540154" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\n25 km long. Jablanica originates on the eastern slopes of the Jablanik mountain, just few kilometers away from Obnica. It curves around Parač mountain and next to the village of Balinović, before it meets Obnica in Valjevo. Jablanica is 21.5 km long. This is also the beginning of the long region of the Kolubara valley, divided in two large parts, referred to as Upper (\"gornja\") Kolubara and Lower (\"donja\") Kolubara (around the Belgrade's suburb of Obrenovac). At Valjevo, the", "id": "20109583" }, { "contents": "Jablanica District\n\n\nThe Jablanica District (, ) is one of nine administrative districts of Southern and Eastern Serbia. It expands in the south-eastern parts of Serbia. According to the 2011 census results, it has a population of 215,463 inhabitants. The administrative center of the district is the city of Leskovac. The district encompasses the municipalities of: According to the 2011 census results, the Jablanica Distract has a total population of 216,304 inhabitants. Ethnic composition of the Jablanica District: Famous cultural-historic monuments in this District are: the Roman", "id": "13223854" }, { "contents": "Kalna, Crna Trava\n\n\nKalna () is a small village in the Crna Trava municipality of the Jablanica District of Serbia. Kalna village is an old Serbian village, 35 km away from the Crna Trava. It is located between Tumba and Serbian-Bulgarian border, at an altitude of 500 to 1100 m. The total area is rural area of 7285 hectares. The Kalna can be reached from three directions: The road in this way was there since the Turkish rule. It was the shortest connection of Leskovac valley (Dubočica) to Sofia and Constantinople", "id": "11211518" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina-Neretva Canton\n\n\ntook place there during World War II and there is a large museum in Jablanica dedicated to these battles. The Neretva river runs through the cities of Konjic, Jablanica, Mostar and Čapljina before it flows through Croatia and into the Adriatic Sea. There are large lakes in the canton such as the Jablanica lake located around the city Jablanica. The southern most municipality in the canton is the Neum municipality which borders the Adriatic sea and the eastern most municipality is the Ravno municipality along the border with Croatia. Of the ten cantons comprising", "id": "3225485" }, { "contents": "Vardar Corps\n\n\nThe Vardar Corps was a corps of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland (JVuO) that operated on the left bank of the river Vardar during the World War II in Yugoslavia on the territory of modern-day North Macedonia and southern Serbia. Its commander was former Captain of the Royal Guard of the Royal Yugoslav Army Stojan Krstić. It consisted of four brigades with total number of 1,000 soldiers. Together with Jablanica Corps, South Morava Corps and Flying Corps it belonged under \"Mountain Staff 110\" () located in Sijarinska Banja", "id": "11325997" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nthe villages of Mitrovo Polje, Bzenica, Pleš, Jablanica, Grčak, Toskići, Budilovina and Milentija. When the Rasina reaches the small town of Brus, it enters the upper Rasina region and continues next to the villages of Tršanovci, Lepenac and Razbojna. At this point the river reaches the western side of the Veliki Jastrebac mountain, and makes a wide, elbow turn to the north. In this part of the course, the Rasina also makes a southeast border of the Aleksandrovačka Župa region. After the villages of Bogiše", "id": "209717" }, { "contents": "Doljanka\n\n\nDoljanka is a right tributary of Neretva river in North Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The length of Doljanka is around 18 km and reaches an altitude drop of about 400 m. Arises from sources scattered type under the far northeast slopes of Vran mountain on altitude of 1324 m. It runs through limestone canyon, which is high up to 1,200 m and flows through the village of Doljani. Doljanka flows into the Neretva River between Jablanica and Mostar, at an altitude of 300 m. It is also the connection over which trouts from the Neretva", "id": "8874715" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nValley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Albanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje", "id": "17667163" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n. The Neretva then flows northwest, through Konjic. It enters the Jablanica Reservoir (\"Jablaničko jezero\"), one of the largest in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake ends near the town of Jablanica. From here on, the Neretva turns southward, continuing to the Adriatic Sea. With the mountains lining its shores gradually receding, the Neretva enters a valley where the city of Mostar lies. It flows under the old bridge (\"Stari most\") and continues, now wider, toward the town of Čapljina and", "id": "3021139" }, { "contents": "Radan (mountain)\n\n\nRadan (Serbian Cyrillic: Радан) is a mountain in southern Serbia, near the town of Kuršumlija. Its highest peak, Šopot, has an elevation of 1,408 meters above sea level. Radan separates the valleys of the Toplica and Jablanica rivers. It is well covered with deciduous and evergreen forests. The best known spot on Radan is the Devil's Town – a peculiar rock formation consisting of hundreds of mushroom-like posts, located on its southern slopes. Near the Devil's Town there are ruins of Ivanova kula –", "id": "3957176" }, { "contents": "Crni Timok\n\n\nкотлина, \"depression of Crna Reka\"), populated with many smaller villages (Lukovo, Jablanica, Valakonje, Savinac, Gamzigrad, Zvezdan). At Gamzigrad there is also an important archeological site from Roman times. After a flow of 84 km, the Crni Timok reaches Zaječar, where it joins the Beli Timok River, forming the Veliki Timok River. It drains an area of . Early in its course it receives from the right the Radovanska, Suva, Velika, Salešča, Šarbanovačka, Jasenova, Bajnska and Suva", "id": "11459489" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (mountain range)\n\n\nJablanica ( ; ) is a mountain range in Southern and Southeastern Europe, stretching north-south direction across the border of Albania and the Republic of North Macedonia. The long mountain ridge is higher than for approximately , while the highest part, located in its very center, is Black Stone at high. Both countries have 50% of the mountain, Albania the west and North Macedonia the east. Jablanica Mountain contains many large mountain lakes. Shebenik mountain is located just to the west of Jablanica and give name to the Shebenik", "id": "3232652" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nThe Vlasina (Serbian Cyrillic: Власина), is a river in southeastern Serbia, a 70 km-long outflow of the Vlasina Lake and a right tributary to the Južna Morava, which also gives its name to the surrounding Vlasina region. The Vlasina flows out from the Vlasina Lake at an altitude of 1,213 m. Lake used to be a large, muddy peat bog, but in 1947-51 the Vlasina was dammed by the long, earth dam and the bog was turned into an artificial lake. The river flows to", "id": "14981330" }, { "contents": "Desná (Morava)\n\n\nDesná () is a river situated in Olomouc region of Czech republic, left tributary of the Morava. It is 43.4 km long, and its basin area is 338 km. The Desná river originates at the confluence of Hučivá Desná and Divoká Desná in Kouty nad Desnou, the village situated in deep valley of High Ash Mountains. The Desná then goes southwest through a valley toward the town of Šumperk. After approximately 43.4 km, the Desná flows into the Morava river near Postřelmov village.The mean annual discharge at its mouth", "id": "20977814" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nSerbian forces then headed south into the Morava valley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Muslims fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Turks fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Muslims departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessalonika. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in", "id": "1099566" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n, in the center of the region. Other larger towns include Trebinje, Stolac, Široki Brijeg, Posušje, Ljubuški, Grude, Konjic, and Čapljina. Borders between Herzegovina and Bosnia are unclear and often disputed. The upper flow of the Neretva River lies in northern Herzegovina, a heavily forested area with fast-flowing rivers and high mountains. Konjic and Jablanica lie in this area. The Neretva rises on Lebršnik Mountain, close to the Montenegro border, and as the river flows west, it enters Herzegovina. The entire", "id": "3021137" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nUpper Neretva, of the Neretva river from its source at 1,227 m.a.s.l. and headwaters gorge all the way to the town of Konjic is 90 km, flows from south to north - north-west as most of the Bosnia and Herzegovina rivers belonging to the Danube watershed, and cover some 1,390 km with average elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva briefly expanding into a wide valley which provides fertile agricultural land. There exists a large Jablaničko Lake, artificially formed after construction of dam near Jablanica. \"Second", "id": "16797216" }, { "contents": "Kubršnica\n\n\nThe Kubršnica (Serbian Cyrillic: Кубршница) is a river in Šumadija region of central Serbia, a 42 km-long left and the longest tributary to the Jasenica river. The Kubršnica originates from the Venčac mountain, in the Jasenica sub-region of Šumadija, in the wider area of the town of Aranđelovac. The terrain in the source area of the river is rich in marble and fireclay. The river flows to the east, next to the Aranđelovac's suburb of Banja and turns north near Topola. After the villages", "id": "5629731" }, { "contents": "Peć Bistrica\n\n\nkm-long, Rugovo glacier. The gorge is sparsely inhabited (the village of Mali Štupelj). As it comes out of the gorge, the Peć Bistrica reaches the town of Peć and enters the bottom of the Metohija depression through which it flows for the rest of its course. It runs parallel to the flows of the White Drin to the north and the Dečanska Bistrica to the south, next to the villages of Goraždevac, Lješane, Jablanica, Drenovce and Zaimovo, before it empties into the White Drin south of", "id": "15886949" }, { "contents": "Zlatibor\n\n\nsylvestris\" var. \"zlatiborica\" is a subspecies of pine originating from the mountain, and is endangered today. A hill by the name of Cigla\",\" located near the nearby village of Jablanica, still has some borderline markings of the Kingdom of Serbia, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Zlatibor itself is located in the northern part of the Stari Vlah region, a historical border region between Raška, Herzegovina and Bosnia. It spreads over an area of , in length, southeast to northwest, and up", "id": "3906304" }, { "contents": "Serbian Christmas traditions\n\n\nhousehold. The members of the group were called \"koledari\". The \"koleda\" was carried out from the Feast of Saint Ignatius Theophorus (five days before Christmas) up until the Epiphany. This custom was best preserved in the upper Pčinja District, and in the region around the River South Morava in the Jablanica District, southeastern Serbia. Regarded as pagan and discouraged by the Serbian Orthodox Church, the \"koleda\" ceased to be performed among most of the Serbs during the 19th and 20th centuries. \"Koledari\"", "id": "20573743" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwere designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of Medveđa have small numbers of Albanians and their descendants remained. This was due to a local Ottoman Albanian commander Shahid Pasha from the Jablanica area negotiating on good terms with Prince Milan and thereby guaranteeing their presence. Some other Albanians such as merchants attempted to remain in Niš, but they left after murders occurred and their property was sold off at low values. In 1879, some Albanian refugees from", "id": "1099570" }, { "contents": "Kosovo Pomoravlje\n\n\nThe region's largest cities are Gjilan and Bujanovac. The region is known as \"Kosovsko Pomoravlje\" (Косовско Поморавље, \"Morava Valley of Kosovo\") in Serbian and as Lugina e Anamoraves Binçes (\"Valley of Binač Morava\") in Albanian. Its name is derived from the Binač Morava River, which flows through northern Macedonia, eastern Kosovo and southern Serbia as part of the Great Morava river system. The region includes part of the valley and the Karadak and Koznik mountains. Gjilan has six municipalities and 287 smaller", "id": "13339352" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nAlbanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje, with the intention of then turning west and", "id": "17667142" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\nThe Resavčina (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресавчина) is a river in Serbia, a 32 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. It is sometimes also called \"Resavica\" or \"Resava\" (not to be confused with another Velika Morava's right tributary of Resava or its own tributary of Resavica). The Resavčina originates near the village of Proštinac in Svilajnac municipality. The river originally flows to the north, but soon turns west at the village of Dubnica and enters the western half of the Veliko Pomoravlje region", "id": "4886222" }, { "contents": "Ibar (river)\n\n\nThe Ibar, also known as the Ibër and Ibri (, , ), is a river that flows through eastern Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, with a total length of . The river begins in the Hajla mountain, in Rožaje, eastern Montenegro, and passes through Kosovo to flow into the West Morava river near Kraljevo, central Serbia. It belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area is , with an average discharge of 60 m³/s at the mouth. It is not navigable. The Ibar originates from", "id": "4536148" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Ilirska Bistrica\n\n\nJablanica (; ) is a settlement southeast of Ilirska Bistrica in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. Jablanica is the site of three known mass graves or unmarked graves from the end of the Second World War. They all contain the remains of German soldiers from the 97th Corps that were killed at the beginning of May 1945. The Mountain Fields Mass Grave (), also known as the Mountain Mass Grave (), lies in a meadow about 1.6 km northeast of Jablanica and contains the remains of 10 soldiers. The Solne Mass", "id": "16911511" }, { "contents": "Čezsoča\n\n\nČezsoča (; ) is a settlement in the Municipality of Bovec in the Littoral region of Slovenia. It includes the hamlets of Gorenja Vas (), Dolenja Vas (), Jablanica, Kršovec, and Na Glavi. Čezsoča lies in the valley on the left bank of the Soča River. The terrain then rises up towards Mount Polovnik (1,480 m). East of the settlement is Humčič Hill (810 m), behind which rises Mount Javoršček (1,557 m). Oplenk Creek flows through the village between Gorenja Vas and", "id": "14920585" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nJablanica, the Neretva enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching in depth. Three hydroelectric dams operate between Jablanica and Mostar. When the Neretva expands for the second and final time, it reaches its third section. This area is often colloquially called the \"\"Bosnian and Herzegovinian California\"\". The last of its course forms wide alluvial delta, before the river empties into the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Tatinac (also known as the", "id": "12890344" }, { "contents": "Jablaničko lake\n\n\nJablaničko lake () is a large artificially formed lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva briefly expands into a wide valley. River provided lot of fertile, agricultural land there, before lake flooded most of it. The lake was created in 1953 after construction of Jablanica Dam near Jablanica in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake has an irregular elongated shape. Its width varies along its length. The lake is a popular vacation destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Swimming, boating and especially fishing are popular activities", "id": "13828307" }, { "contents": "Jablanica Dam\n\n\nThe Jablanica Dam is an arch-gravity dam on the Neretva River about northeast of Jablanica in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The dam was constructed between 1947 and 1955 with the primary purpose of hydroelectric power production. The power station was commissioned in two stages, from 1955 until 1958. The first generator was commissioned in February 1955. An upgrade in 2008 increased the installed capacity of the power station from 150 MW to 180 MW. The dam's power station is located about to the southeast near Jablanica", "id": "854706" }, { "contents": "Jablanik\n\n\nJablanik (Serbian Cyrillic: Јабланик) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Valjevo. Its highest peak \"Jablanik\" has an elevation of 1,275 meters(10001020_ above sea level. Jablanik is located at the source of the river Jablanica. It is separated from nearby Medvednik mountain by high pass Stolica, while the Debelo Brdo saddle separates it from Povlen in the southeast. The highest peak has the same name as the mountain itself - Jablanik, and is 1,275 m high. The hills around the peak are mainly", "id": "366162" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\nThe Nišava or Nishava (Bulgarian and , ) is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia, a right tributary, and with a length of 218 km also the longest one, of the South Morava. The Nišava originates in western Bulgaria, in the Stara Planina mountains (east of Kom Peak) near the village of Gintsi. Its source is close to the Serbian border. It enters Serbia after 67 km of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries. Because it flows through Gintsi, the upper course of the river is", "id": "9627075" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nAfter Mramorac village, the Jasenica spills over in several parallel flows, which continue until its confluence. After the Pridvorica and Vodice villages (on different arms of the river), the Jasenica reaches the town of Smederevska Palanka, the most populous settlement in its valley. This is also where the Kubršnica, its main tributary, flows into it from the left. The Jasenica then gently bends to the east, flowing into the Great Morava near the village of Veliko Orašje (the southern arm of the river flows through the town", "id": "3481502" }, { "contents": "Gruža (river)\n\n\nThe Gruža (Serbian Cyrillic: Гружа, ) is a river in central Serbia. The river is a 62 km long left tributary to the Zapadna Morava. The Gruža originates in the central part of the Rudnik mountain, right under the mountain's main settlement, the village of Rudnik, northeast of the town of Gornji Milanovac, central Serbia. The river flows south next to the village of Majdan, around the Rudnik mountain into the Takovo region and at the village of Nevade, just few kilometers away from Gornji Milanovac,", "id": "10971320" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\n(hamlet Panjak) on the Serbian-Bosnian border Crni Rzav meets the Jablanica river at the village Gornje Vardište and finally the river Beli Rzav at the village of Donje Vardište. The Rzav continues as the natural extension of the Beli Rzav, but since the Black Rzav is longer, the latter is considered to be the main headstream. It floes between the southernmost part of the Zvijezda mountain (\"Ponos\" peak) from the north and the Suha Gora mountain from the south, next to the villages of Prosjek (and", "id": "11540155" }, { "contents": "Ub (river)\n\n\nThe Ub (Serbian Cyrillic: Уб) is a river in western Serbia, a 57 km-long right and longest tributary to Tamnava river. The Ub originates from the Vlašić mountain in Podgorina region of west Serbia, near the village of Kasapo. From its source to the mouth, the river flows to the east, parallel to the river Tamnava, which it will eventually join. The villages located in the upper section of the river's flow are Družetić, Pambukovica and Čučuge, where the Ub slightly turns to the", "id": "2261401" }, { "contents": "Olomouc Region\n\n\nof the region is situated on the water level of the Morava River near to Kojetín in the Přerov District (190 m above sea level). The Morava river flows through the region and the majority of the region's territory belongs to Morava’s drainage basin. A small northern part of the region belongs to the drainage basin of Odra River, which flows to the Baltic Sea. The Olomouc Region offers a great variety of natural points of interest. Protected landscape area of the Jeseníky mountains offers a number of scenic places such", "id": "11419394" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina\n\n\nJablanica is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is situated on the Neretva river and Jablanica lake. The municipality of Jablanica is a major tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The municipality offer a wide variety of activities. The surrounding mountains such as Plasa, Čvrsnica and Prenj offer both hunting grounds and a variety of hiking trails. One popular hiking destination is \"Hajdučka Vrata\", a natural wonder, the product of wind", "id": "9009264" }, { "contents": "Krupá (Morava)\n\n\nKrupá (German: Graupa Bach) is a creek in Šumperk District, Moravia, left tributary of the Morava. Its length is 19,2 km and its drainage basin covers 112.7 km2. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 4.48 m³/s. The Krupá originates in Czech part of the Śnieżnik Mountains, 400 meters above sea level. The Krupá then goes south toward the town of Staré Město. It flows into the Morava river near Hanušovice town. River keeps its natural character with meanders and original riversides. A river bottom is", "id": "1745557" }, { "contents": "Oskava (river)\n\n\nOskava is a river in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic, left tributary of the Morava river. Its length is 50.3 km and its drainage basin covers 569 km. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 3.53 m/s. The Oskava originates from southeast slope of Kamenná hora in Hrubý Jeseník, 215 meters above sea level. The river is surrounded by woods in upper reaches, flows through hills of Nízký Jeseník in middle reaches and its lower reaches is situated in swampy floodplain of Litovelské Pomoraví Protected Landscape Area.", "id": "8538845" }, { "contents": "Crna Trava\n\n\nCrna Trava ( ) is a village and municipality located in the Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to 2011 census, the population of the village is 434 inhabitants, while population of the municipality is 1,663. This is the smallest by population and poorest municipality in Serbia. Crna Trava is famous for its migrant builders, who are considered the best in the region and are colloquially described as \"building half of Yugoslavia\". The name of the village in Serbian translates to \"Black Grass\". The origin of the name", "id": "18032485" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\n. At the village of Kušiljevo, the river receives the small stream of \"Beljeva\" from the left and turns northward, which is the general direction of its course for the rest of the flow. The river flows parallel to the Velika Morava river as its satellite flow, in the Morava's floodplain, so there are no settlements on the Resavica itself, but several large villages are located in its valley (Porodin, Žabari, Simićevo, Aleksandrovac Požarevački, Vlaški Do, Poljana), all of them located on the", "id": "4886223" }, { "contents": "Lugomir\n\n\nThe Lugomir (Serbian Cyrillic: Лугомир) is a river in central Serbia, a 57 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. The Lugomir originates from two headstreams, the Dulenska reka and the Županjevačka reka. The shorter headstream of Županjevačka reka (Cyrillic: \"Жупањевачка река\") originates from the mountain of Gledićke planine in southern Šumadija region of central Serbia. Its spring is just some 500 m away from the source of Lugomir's another headstream, the Dulenska reka. The river first flows to the east", "id": "5130918" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\ncities in Serbia, 10 km after which the Nišava empties into the Južna Morava. However, with the rapid growth of Niš in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs, the banks of the Nišava are urbanized almost to its mouth. After being divided into districts in 1992, the Nišava District (with Niš as administrative center) is named after the river. The river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area covers 4,086 km, of which about 73% in Serbia, the rest in Bulgaria", "id": "9627077" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nsection\" begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama river between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes a southern course and enter a largest canyons of its course, running through steep slopes of magnificent mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching 800–1200 meters in depth. From here Neretva flows toward the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Jezernica (also Tatinac), the Gornji and Donji Krupac, the Ljuta-Dindolka, the Jesenica, the Bjelimićka Rijeka, the Slatinica, the Račica, the Rakitnica, the Konjička", "id": "16797217" }, { "contents": "Resava (river)\n\n\nThe Resava (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресава) is a river in central Serbia, a 65 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava. It also gives the name to the surrounding Resava region, the Resava Monastery, the coal mines in its valley and a popular tourist destination of Resava Cave. The Resava originates from the Homolje region in eastern Serbia. It springs out at an altitude of 1,100 m and flows westward between the mountains of Beljanica (on the north) and Kučaj (on the south). In its", "id": "15040274" }, { "contents": "A1 motorway (Serbia)\n\n\nJužna Morava river. Southern section (Niš–Leskovac–Vranje–Macedonian border) consists of 128 km that are in service, while additional 26 km are under construction. Construction of southern section has been completed by May 2019, and last sections opened for traffic on 18 May 2019: Highway passes through valley of South Morava, passes west of Niš, by Merošina and Leskovac, and after Grdelica built highway ends. 26 kilometers of highway under construction passes through Grdelica gorge, very difficult terrain. This sections is often considered", "id": "1785427" }, { "contents": "Čivelj\n\n\nČivelj is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in the municipality of Jablanica, Herzegovina-Neretva Canton, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1991, the village had six inhabitants, all of whom were Muslims. In 2013, Čivelj had 10 inhabitants. Tourism is solid. Civelj is placed 8 kilometres from Jablanica and it is placed on Jablanica lake. In lake there are 5 types of fishes including the most popular \"pastrmka\". The village was found in 1911. by local fishermen. Near Civelj", "id": "4645021" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nAlthough these streams are of low outflow, there are also numerous wellsprings rising on both sides of the canyon at the river banks, with high-capacity discharge. Three large hydroelectric power stations operate in this section of the Neretva, between Jablanica and Mostar, namely Grabovica HPP, Salakovac HPP and Mostar HPP. Jablanica lake is a large artificial lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva expands into a wide valley. The river provided fertile, agricultural land before the lake flooded most of it. The lake", "id": "12890353" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nThe Jasenica (Serbian Cyrillic: Јасеница, ) is a river in central Serbia. It is long and is the left tributary of the Great Morava. This river gives the name to the surrounding region. The Jasenica originates from several streams, most notably the Đurinci (Cyrillic: Ђуринци) from Venčac mountain, and the Srebrenica (Cyrillic: Сребреница) from the northern slopes of the Rudnik mountain in central Serbia. At its origin, the river runs through the eastern border of the Kačer region. It flows to the southeast", "id": "3481500" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nin north Skopje, Macedonia. The streams Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is, after passing the Macedonian-Serbian border, known as the Binačka Morava. After 49 km it meets the Preševska Moravica at Bujanovac, and for the remainder, 246 km, flows as the South Morava. The South Morava belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and its own drainage area is 15,696 km², of which 1,237 km² is in Bulgaria (through its right tributary Nišava). Its average", "id": "15699472" }, { "contents": "Pešter\n\n\nRivers Uvac, Vapa, Jablanica and Grabovica flow through the plateau. In the geologic past, the field was a large lake, of which only a small Sjenica lake near the village of Tuzinje remained. The soil is mostly karst interspersed with pastures. Economy of the area relies primarily on cattle breeding, chiefly sheep. Pešter is famous for its dairy products, especially the \"Sjenica cheese\" (\"Sjenički sir\"), as well as lamb and prosciutto. The plateau is sparsely populated: most settlements are on the", "id": "16748290" }, { "contents": "Sredačka župa\n\n\nSredačka Župa (; \"county of Sredska\") is a remote geographical region, a valley, in southeastern Kosovo, below the Šar Mountains at the source of the Prizrenska Bistrica. The region, an oval basin, lies below the Šar Mountains, at the source, upper stream of the Prizrenska Bistrica (\"Prizren river\"). South of the region between the Prizren mountains and Koritnik mountain, lies the Gora region. It currently includes Sredska, Pousko, Jablanica, Lokvica, Rečane, Živinjane, Planjane, Nebregošte,", "id": "13372292" }, { "contents": "Binačka Morava\n\n\nBinačka Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Биначка Морава; ) or (\"Mirusha\") is a river which flows in southeastern Kosovo and North Macedonia. It flows generally in the southwest to northeast direction, from Macedonian border to Bujanovac, where, after 49 km, meets Preševska Moravica, to create South Morava. The river begins in the mountain of Skopska Crna Gora, in North Macedonia, north of its capital Skopje. Streams of Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is,", "id": "12867615" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwar, the Albanian population depending on the area reacted differently to incoming Serbian forces by either offering resistance or fleeing toward nearby mountains and Ottoman Kosovo. Although most of these Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces, a small presence was allowed to remain in the Jablanica valley where their descendants live today. Serbs from Lab moved to Serbia during and after the first round of hostilities in 1876, while incoming Albanian refugees thereafter 1878 repopulated their villages. Albanian refugees also settled alongside the north-eastern Ottoman-Serbian border, in urban areas", "id": "1099553" }, { "contents": "Banjska River\n\n\nThe Banjska River ( / \"Banjska reka\", \"Baths River\"), is a river in southern Serbia, the right tributary of Toplica in which it flows near Kuršumlija. It rises under the far south-eastern branch of Kopaonik. It is 22 km long, with a river basin area of 155 km². The average flow at the mouth is 0,7 m³/s. The valley of the river is mostly ravines, while the basin is rich in forest. The Kuršumlija-Kuršumlijska Banja-Prepolac Pass-Podujevo-", "id": "14979528" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nby a catastrophic flood. Then unregulated river Jablanica, swollen after a long rainy period, broke on June 6, spilled out of its banks and caused enormous material damage Lebane. Flood toll was paid and human victims (killed two people). After this tragic event, with financial help, Lebane begins to industrialize faster, and the process of industrialization has caused more versatile and faster development of the city. According to the 2011 census, the municipality has 22,000 inhabitants. The ethnic composition of the municipality: The following table", "id": "17523935" }, { "contents": "Čvrsnica\n\n\nČvrsnica () is a mountain in the Dinarides of Bosnia and Herzegovina, located in northern Herzegovina, most of the mountain is located in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton municipalities of Mostar and Jablanica while the smaller part of the mountain, around 10% is located in the municipality of Posušje. The highest peak (Pločno) is 2228 metres. Čvrsnica is surrounded by the river Neretva from the east (20 km), its tributaries Doljanka (18 km) from the north and Drežanka (19.8 km) from the south,", "id": "6129606" }, { "contents": "Myjava (river)\n\n\nThe Myjava River is a river in western Slovakia and for a small part in the Czech Republic and left tributary of the Morava River. It rises in the White Carpathians near the village of Nová Lhota in Moravia, but crosses the Czech-Slovak border shortly afterwards and flows in a southern direction until the town of Myjava, where it enters the Myjava Hills and turns west. Near Sobotište it flows into the Záhorie Lowland and turns south until the village of Jablonica, turning northwest and from Senica it flows west, passing through", "id": "2099838" }, { "contents": "West Morava\n\n\nSouth and Great Morava's meridian (south-to-north) flow, the West Morava runs in an opposed, latitudinal (west-to-east) direction, dividing the region of Šumadija of the central Serbia from the southern parts of the country. Due to the West Morava's direction, it flows between many mountains, regions and sub-regions: The West Morava river valley, Zapadno Pomoravlje, is economically the most developed of all three Morava river valleys. With the valley of the Ibar, the West", "id": "7786624" }, { "contents": "Ralja (river)\n\n\nThe Ralja () is a river in Šumadija region of Serbia, a 51 km long left tributary to the Jezava, a tributary of the Great Morava river. It also gives its name to the surrounding Šumadija's subregion of Ralja. The Ralja originates from the northern part of the Kosmaj mountain, north of the village of Velika Ivanča, in the Sopot municipality of the City of Belgrade. Almost from the source, the river valley is a route for the Belgrade-Niš railway. At the villages of Popović and Mali", "id": "2491229" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nBovan gorge carved by the river and is very popular local and regional tourist destination, especially among campers and fishermen, but the coastline is not put in order. The river continues to the south, in an inverse flow, and after the villages of Subotinac and Kraljevo, it empties into the Južna Morava at the town of Aleksinac. The lower section used to be a coal mining area too, just like the upper one, but the mines (Aleksinački Rudnik) are closed now. The Sokobanjska Moravica brlongs to the Black", "id": "1726358" }, { "contents": "Golijska Moravica\n\n\nThe Golijska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Голијска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in western Serbia. With a length of 98 km, it is the longer headstream of the Zapadna Morava (it forms it with the Đetinja), and thus, of the Velika Morava. Its name, Moravica, means \"little Morava\" in Serbian, and it also gives its name to the surrounding region and the modern Moravica District of Serbia. The Golijska Moravica originates from the western slopes of the Golija mountain and flows", "id": "5380325" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\n. The Nišava is not navigable. It is not only the longest tributary of the Južna Morava, but also the largest one in terms of discharge (36 km/s). It has many smaller tributaries, the most important being the Temštica from the right, and the Jerma (or Sukovska reka), Crvena reka, Koritnička reka and Kutinska reka from the left. The Nišava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia: the route follows the valleys of the Morava", "id": "9627078" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nThe Toplica (Serbian Cyrillic: Топлица, ) is a river in southern Serbia. The river is 130 km long and gives its name to the region it flows through, which constitutes most of the modern Toplica District of Serbia. The Toplica originates under the name of \"Duboka\" from the eastern slopes of the Kopaonik mountain, just south of the highest peak, Pančićev vrh. It flows to the southeast, on the western slopes of the Lepa Gora mountain, next to the villages of Merćez, Selova, Žuč,", "id": "19530451" }, { "contents": "Great Morava\n\n\nof the Velika Morava's right tributary Resava). The average discharge of the Velika Morava on its confluence with Danube is 255 m³/s (120 m³/s brought by Zapadna Morava, 100 m³/s by Južna Morava, and 35 m³/s amounted by the Velika Morava itself). Tributaries of the Velika Morava are short, the longest one being the Jasenica (79 km) and others rarely exceeding 50 km. Right tributaries are: Jovanovačka reka, Crnica, Ravanica, Resava and Resavica (or Resavčina). Left tributaries are more numerous,", "id": "2295702" }, { "contents": "Vevčani\n\n\nVevčani () is a village in the Republic of North Macedonia. It is the only settlement and seat of Vevčani Municipality. The village of Vevčani is found in the southwestern range at the foot of the Jablanica mountain range. It is situated from 800 – 950 metres above sea level. The village is located 14 km North-West of the town of Struga. The village is situated near the villages of Oktisi, Velešta, Podgorci, Gorna Belica with the Albanian border to the West of the village. The famous Vevčani", "id": "5042995" } ]
The Jablanica ( Serbian : Јабланица , ) is an river in southern Serbia . A left tributary of the South ( or Južna ) Morava river , it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia 's Jablanica District , with the region contributing about one third of the district 's area . The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain , near the village of Grbavce , on the administrative border of the Kosovo province . The area is rich in thermal springs , so several spas are located near the river : Stara Banja , Ravna Banja and Sijarina with popular Sijarinska Banja . At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary Čokotinska reka ( Cyrillic : Чокотинска река ) , turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point . The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the and [START_ENT] Radan [END_ENT] mountains , in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the in Kosovo . The river flows eastward , passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo , before reaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac , part of the depression of Leskovac , which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava . In the region , near Lebane , a famed archeological find of ( Iustiniana Prima ) is located . The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo , Vranovce , Bošnjace , Turekovac and Stopanje , reaches Vinarce , the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac , and turns north . First it flows parallel to the Veternica river , to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje , then parallel to the Južna Morava . After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava . From Pečenjevce , a parallel flow ( canal ) begins , connecting the Jablanica and s , some 15 km to the north . Through Južna Morava , the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin , draining an area of 895 km ² itself . It 's not navigable and has an average discharge of 6 m ³ / s , which in rainy years grows much higher , so the river floods its valley causing lots of material damage . The name of the river , Jablanica , in Serbian means the
2bc7883c-9fe1-41c3-8105-5088d31d9691_river:8
[{"answer": "Radan (mountain)", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "7498984", "title": "Radan (mountain)"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nreaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac, part of the depression of Leskovac, which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. In the region, near Lebane, a famed archeological find of Caričin grad (\"Iustiniana Prima\") is located. The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo, Vranovce, Bošnjace, Turekovac and Stopanje, reaches Vinarce, the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac", "id": "3481303" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\n, and turns north. First it flows parallel to the Veternica river, to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje, then parallel to the Južna Morava. After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava. From Pečenjevce, a parallel flow (canal) begins, connecting the Jablanica and Toplica rivers, some 15 km to the north. Through Južna Morava, the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, draining an area of itself. It's not navigable", "id": "3481304" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\npopular Sijarinska Banja. At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary \"Čokotinska reka\" (Cyrillic: \"Чокотинска река\"), turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point. The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the Majdan and Radan mountains, in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the District of Priština in Kosovo. The river flows eastward, passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo, before", "id": "3481302" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nThe Jablanica (, ) is an river in southern Serbia. A left tributary of the South (or Južna) Morava river, it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia's Jablanica District, with the region contributing about one third of the district's area. The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain, near the village of Grbavce, on the border with Kosovo. The area is rich in thermal springs, so several spas are located near the river: Stara Banja, Ravna Banja and Sijarina with", "id": "3481301" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nJablanica with third parallel flow, the \"Sušica\", being formed in between. Settlements include many small villages, like Vina, Bukova Gora, Miroševce, Žabljane, Beli Potok and Strojkovce. In the Leskovac field, the river gently turns north, receives the Sušica from the left and reaches the town of Leskovac. The Veternica continues northward, being connected to the Jablanica river by the canal at the village of Bogojevce, before it empties into the Južna Morava. The Veternica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its", "id": "11539775" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nThe Veternica (Serbian Cyrillic: Ветерница, ) is a river in southern Serbia, a 75 km long left tributary to the Južna Morava, which gives the name to the region surrounding its valley. The Veternica originates from the Grot peak, the southernmost part of the Kukavica mountain. Four smaller streams meet at the village of Vlase and continue to the north as the Veternica. The river flows next to the villages of Golemo Selo, Oštra Glava and Gagince, where it flows parallel to the Jablanica river. As the Veternica", "id": "11539773" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nbends to the northeast, it enters the low Veternica region, part of the Leskovac field in the composite valley of the Južna Morava. Small region, located between the Kukavica mountain on the south and the Jablanica region on the north, is divided in two micro-regions, upper one being centered on the small town of Vučje (which is not located on the river itself) while the center of the lower micro-region is the town of Leskovac. As it enters the region, the Veternica furthers away from the", "id": "11539774" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nthe west, Kukavica and Čemernik in the south and Babička Gora, Seličevica and Suva Planina to the east. The largest river in the region of Leskovac is the South Morava River, which flows south to north. Tributaries of the South Morava are: the Vlasina river, which collects water from Lake Vlasina and flows through Crna Trava and Vlasotince; the Veternica river, which flows through Leskovac; the Jablanica river, which springs from the foot of Goljak and flows through Medveđa and Lebane; the Pusta (Deserted) river,", "id": "2857704" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nof 590 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and is not navigable. The region of Pusta Reka mostly correspondence with the river's watershed. It is located between the Pasjača mountain and lower Toplica region (on the north), the Southern Pomoravlje (Field of Leskovac, on the east), the Jablanica region (on the south) and the Radan mountain (on the west). The region is an agricultural area, almost without any industry, except for some smaller facilities in regional center, Bojnik", "id": "12523581" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nof Podina, Voljčince, Badnjevac and the smaller regional center Žitorađa. After the Toplica reaches municipal center of Doljevac, it enters the most densely populated part of the south Pomoravlje, turns north and flows into the Južna Morava at the village of Orljane, across the medieval ruins of Kurvin grad, as Južna Morava's longest left tributary. The Toplica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its own drainage area of 2,217 km². The river is not navigable. The river valley is a major traffic route in southern Serbia as", "id": "19530454" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nThe Sokobanjska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Сокобањска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in central eastern Serbia, a 58 km-long right tributary to the Južna Morava river. The Sokobanjska Moravica originates from the eastern slopes of the Devica mountain, near the village of Skrobnica. The river flows to the north, turns westward at the village of Levovik and enters the Banja region. The rivers flows between the northern slopes of the Devica and Ozren mountains (on the south) and southern slopes of the Rtanj mountain", "id": "1726356" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\nmouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. As the wider Jabllanica region, Medveđa also had an Albanian majority. These Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces in a way that today would be characterized as ethnic cleansing. Due to depopulation and economic considerations some small numbers of Albanians were allowed to stay and return though not to their previous settlements and instead were designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of", "id": "7117787" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\n, a notable Muslim population existed in the districts of Niš, Pirot, Vranje, Leskovac, Prokuplje and Kuršumlija. The rural parts of Toplica, Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the", "id": "1099558" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nthe southernmost slopes of the Suva Planina and Babička Gora mountains, it reaches the town of Vlasotince and western parts of the low Leskovac field, part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. After the villages of Batulovce and Stajkovce, the Vlasina empties into the Južna Morava, east of the Leskovac's eastern suburb of Mrštane. The Vlasina drains an area of 991 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin and it is not navigable. On 26 June 1988, after a period of heavy rains, Vlasina was a", "id": "14981332" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nThe Pusta River ( / \"Pusta reka\", \"Desolate River\") is a river in southern Serbia, a 71-km long left tributary to the South Morava. It also gives the name to the Pusta Reka region in its valley. The river originates northeast of Prolom Banja, near the Sokolovica village, on the northern tip of the Radan mountain, as the \"Golema River\" (\"Big River\"). It flows eastward, between the mountains of Radan (to the south) and Pasjača (to the", "id": "12523579" }, { "contents": "Persecution of Muslims during Ottoman contraction\n\n\nReka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the Turks were of Albanian origin. The Muslims in the cities of Niš and Pirot were Turkish-speaking; Vranje and Leskovac were Turkish- and Albanian-speaking; Prokuplje", "id": "8891598" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nvalley between Konjic and Jablanica, known simply as \"Neretva\" since Middle Ages, the new point for hydrographical division became dam of the Jablanica HPP where also is a place of confluence of the rivers Neretva and Rama. Here the Neretva river suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before it reach town of Jablanica. From this point it turns again toward south and enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes of the mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica", "id": "12890350" }, { "contents": "Rama (Neretva)\n\n\nRama is a river in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a major tributary of the Neretva. It joins it from the right by discharging into Neretva's artificial reservoir, Jablaničko lake, at place called Marina Pećina, near village of Gračac, between location of underground powerhouse of Rama Hydroelectric Power Station and Jablanica Dam, depending on water level in Jablaničko lake, some 15 kilometers upstream from Jablanica. The Rama flows through municipalities of Prozor-Rama and Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, while its headwaters together with wellsprings in the region of", "id": "3052779" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\nThe Kolubara (Serbian Cyrillic: Колубара, ), is a long river in western Serbia; it is an eastern, right tributary to the Sava river. Kolubara is formed by the two small rivers Obnica and Jablanica. \"Obnica\" is the river in Western Serbia that springs at the foot of the mountain Medvednik. It flows to the East, through the villages of Suvodanje, Bobova, Majinović, Pričević and Zlatarić, and at the city of Valjevo meets the river \"Jablanica\" and forms Kolubara. The Obnica is", "id": "20109582" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\ndating to the 4th century AD lay at various locations of the town, as it was a transitory zone of Upper Moesia; travel and postal stations are among the finds. Toponyms such as \"Arbanaška\" and \"Đjake\" shows an Albanian presence in the Toplica and Southern Morava regions (located north-east of contemporary Kosovo) before the expulsion of Albanians during 1877–1878 period. The rural parts of Jablanica valley and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river", "id": "7117786" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\naverage elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva again expands into a third and largest valley which provided fertile agricultural land before it was flooded by large artificial reservoir, Jablaničko Lake, formed after construction of a Jablanica Dam near town of Jablanica. The second section begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before reaches town of Jablanica, from which point turns again toward south. From", "id": "12890343" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nLebane () is a town and municipality located in Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 10,062 inhabitants, while the municipality has 20,000 inhabitants. The town is located at the confluence of the rivers Jablanica and Šumanska Reka, in the alluvial plain created by the former. Just northeast of the town a larger plain called Leskovačko polje extends toward the town of Leskovac, which is the district seat. The elevation of the town of Lebane is between 275.2 and 420 MASL.", "id": "17523929" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nRakic writes about it as a \"\"big village populated by Serbs, in a valley, on the river Jablanica, on its left bank.\"\" Only when Lebane got the role of Jablanica district headquarters, it began to gradually develop in a direction of a small town. The core of this small town was a series of houses along the Jablanica which is 45m wide here (as is even now); at the end of this series are the buildings of the Court and Municipality. The main feature of", "id": "17523931" }, { "contents": "Štulac (Lebane)\n\n\nthe village of Prekopčelica. The village is located on the valley slopes of the Caričin Potok creek. It is scattered between the altitudes of . It is situated in the wider Pusta Reka region. The village rests on the western slopes of the , which here divides the regions of Pusta Reka and Jablanica. On the west, the easternmost slopes of the Radan mountain begin. The village area covers . The Slavs settled in the area in the 7th century, centering around the ruins of Iustiniana Prima. Due to the lack of", "id": "11151840" }, { "contents": "Grdelica\n\n\nGrdelica () is a town in southern Serbia. It is situated in the Leskovac municipality, in the Jablanica District. The total population of the town was 3,194 people as of the 2011 census. For census purposes, Grdelica is divided into two adjacent parts, southern \"Grdelica town\" (\"Grdelica varoš\"; population 2,136) and northern \"Grdelica village\" (\"Grdelica selo\"; 1,058). Grdelica lies at the South Morava river, on the mountainous terrain at the entrance of the Grdelica Gorge. It", "id": "460756" }, { "contents": "Gornji Bučumet\n\n\nall settlements registered separately in the census. The three settlements lie in the South Morava basin, above the Jablanica river, and as such are located in the Upper Jablanica region. The highest mountain in Upper Bučumet is Paramid (853), with the mountain of Sv. Petar (1149) being located in Middle Bučumet. The three neighbourhoods of Bučumet are 470 to 853 metres above sea level. There is a medieval church built on the ruins of an older church. During the Toplica-Jablanica Operation (, ) in", "id": "12752738" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nthe huge floods of its daughter river. The South Morava has 157 tributaries. The most important left tributaries are: Jablanica, Veternica, Pusta reka and Toplica. Right tributaries are: Vrla, Vlasina, Nišava (the longest) and Sokobanjska Moravica. The South Morava has a significant potential for electricity production, and a huge hydroelectrical system (Vlasina- Vrla I-IV power stations) has been constructed in its drainage basin. To a certain extent, its waters are used for irrigation. The river valley's most important role", "id": "15699476" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nThe Rasina () is a river in south central Serbia. The long river flows through the Rasina region, gives its name to the modern Rasina District of Serbia, and flows into the Zapadna Morava near the city of Kruševac. Its historical name is Arsen (Αρσεγα). The Rasina springs from the southern slopes of the Goč mountain, near the village of Rašovka, southwest of the most famous Serbian spa, Vrnjačka Banja. The river originally flows to the southeast, around the mountains of Željin and Kopaonik, next to", "id": "209716" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nLeskovac (Serbian Cyrillic: Лесковац, ) is a city and the administrative center of the Jablanica District in southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the city urban area has 60,288 inhabitants, while the city administrative area has 144,206. Traces of life of the Brnjica culture (8th century BC) is seen at the Hisar Hill (Hisar Leskovac) that was protected by a deep moat with a palisade on its inner side, a fortification similar to that of another fortification on the site near Zlokućane in the Velika Morava basin", "id": "2857693" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nThe favorable location and the richness of nature made Jablanica valley important place since the earliest times. Traffic affordable and fertile, Leskovac valley has provided favorable conditions for the settlement of population. Archaeological findings, of which the most important are Hissar and Caričin grad (Iustiniana Prima) show that life in this area, continuously evolved from prehistoric man to date. First mention of Lebane as Hlebane dates back to 1512. Lebane is formed as a village of the same name after the liberation in 1878. Visiting Serbia in 1880s, M.", "id": "17523930" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nThe South Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Јужна Морава, Serbian Latin: \"Južna Morava\", ; ) is a river in eastern Kosovo and in southern Serbia, which represents the shorter headwater of Great Morava. Today, it is 295 km long, including its source river Binačka Morava. It flows generally in the south to north direction, from Macedonian border to Kosovo and onwards to Central Serbia, where it meets West Morava at Stalać, to create Great Morava. The river rises in the Skopska Crna Gora mountain", "id": "15699471" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\nis the Rzav's longer headstream. It originates from the Čigota mountain, eastern section of the Zlatibor mountain. The river originally flows northward, next to the villages of Vodice and Jokina Ćuprija, reaches the central section of the Zlatibor where it is dammed and creates the artificial Ribnica lake (surface area of 10 km²), after the nearby village of Ribnica. After the lake, the river sharply turns west and soon gets followed by the parallel stream of the \"Jablanica\" river. After crossing the village of Mokra Gora", "id": "11540154" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\n25 km long. Jablanica originates on the eastern slopes of the Jablanik mountain, just few kilometers away from Obnica. It curves around Parač mountain and next to the village of Balinović, before it meets Obnica in Valjevo. Jablanica is 21.5 km long. This is also the beginning of the long region of the Kolubara valley, divided in two large parts, referred to as Upper (\"gornja\") Kolubara and Lower (\"donja\") Kolubara (around the Belgrade's suburb of Obrenovac). At Valjevo, the", "id": "20109583" }, { "contents": "Jablanica District\n\n\nThe Jablanica District (, ) is one of nine administrative districts of Southern and Eastern Serbia. It expands in the south-eastern parts of Serbia. According to the 2011 census results, it has a population of 215,463 inhabitants. The administrative center of the district is the city of Leskovac. The district encompasses the municipalities of: According to the 2011 census results, the Jablanica Distract has a total population of 216,304 inhabitants. Ethnic composition of the Jablanica District: Famous cultural-historic monuments in this District are: the Roman", "id": "13223854" }, { "contents": "Kalna, Crna Trava\n\n\nKalna () is a small village in the Crna Trava municipality of the Jablanica District of Serbia. Kalna village is an old Serbian village, 35 km away from the Crna Trava. It is located between Tumba and Serbian-Bulgarian border, at an altitude of 500 to 1100 m. The total area is rural area of 7285 hectares. The Kalna can be reached from three directions: The road in this way was there since the Turkish rule. It was the shortest connection of Leskovac valley (Dubočica) to Sofia and Constantinople", "id": "11211518" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina-Neretva Canton\n\n\ntook place there during World War II and there is a large museum in Jablanica dedicated to these battles. The Neretva river runs through the cities of Konjic, Jablanica, Mostar and Čapljina before it flows through Croatia and into the Adriatic Sea. There are large lakes in the canton such as the Jablanica lake located around the city Jablanica. The southern most municipality in the canton is the Neum municipality which borders the Adriatic sea and the eastern most municipality is the Ravno municipality along the border with Croatia. Of the ten cantons comprising", "id": "3225485" }, { "contents": "Vardar Corps\n\n\nThe Vardar Corps was a corps of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland (JVuO) that operated on the left bank of the river Vardar during the World War II in Yugoslavia on the territory of modern-day North Macedonia and southern Serbia. Its commander was former Captain of the Royal Guard of the Royal Yugoslav Army Stojan Krstić. It consisted of four brigades with total number of 1,000 soldiers. Together with Jablanica Corps, South Morava Corps and Flying Corps it belonged under \"Mountain Staff 110\" () located in Sijarinska Banja", "id": "11325997" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nthe villages of Mitrovo Polje, Bzenica, Pleš, Jablanica, Grčak, Toskići, Budilovina and Milentija. When the Rasina reaches the small town of Brus, it enters the upper Rasina region and continues next to the villages of Tršanovci, Lepenac and Razbojna. At this point the river reaches the western side of the Veliki Jastrebac mountain, and makes a wide, elbow turn to the north. In this part of the course, the Rasina also makes a southeast border of the Aleksandrovačka Župa region. After the villages of Bogiše", "id": "209717" }, { "contents": "Doljanka\n\n\nDoljanka is a right tributary of Neretva river in North Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The length of Doljanka is around 18 km and reaches an altitude drop of about 400 m. Arises from sources scattered type under the far northeast slopes of Vran mountain on altitude of 1324 m. It runs through limestone canyon, which is high up to 1,200 m and flows through the village of Doljani. Doljanka flows into the Neretva River between Jablanica and Mostar, at an altitude of 300 m. It is also the connection over which trouts from the Neretva", "id": "8874715" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nValley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Albanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje", "id": "17667163" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n. The Neretva then flows northwest, through Konjic. It enters the Jablanica Reservoir (\"Jablaničko jezero\"), one of the largest in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake ends near the town of Jablanica. From here on, the Neretva turns southward, continuing to the Adriatic Sea. With the mountains lining its shores gradually receding, the Neretva enters a valley where the city of Mostar lies. It flows under the old bridge (\"Stari most\") and continues, now wider, toward the town of Čapljina and", "id": "3021139" }, { "contents": "Radan (mountain)\n\n\nRadan (Serbian Cyrillic: Радан) is a mountain in southern Serbia, near the town of Kuršumlija. Its highest peak, Šopot, has an elevation of 1,408 meters above sea level. Radan separates the valleys of the Toplica and Jablanica rivers. It is well covered with deciduous and evergreen forests. The best known spot on Radan is the Devil's Town – a peculiar rock formation consisting of hundreds of mushroom-like posts, located on its southern slopes. Near the Devil's Town there are ruins of Ivanova kula –", "id": "3957176" }, { "contents": "Crni Timok\n\n\nкотлина, \"depression of Crna Reka\"), populated with many smaller villages (Lukovo, Jablanica, Valakonje, Savinac, Gamzigrad, Zvezdan). At Gamzigrad there is also an important archeological site from Roman times. After a flow of 84 km, the Crni Timok reaches Zaječar, where it joins the Beli Timok River, forming the Veliki Timok River. It drains an area of . Early in its course it receives from the right the Radovanska, Suva, Velika, Salešča, Šarbanovačka, Jasenova, Bajnska and Suva", "id": "11459489" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (mountain range)\n\n\nJablanica ( ; ) is a mountain range in Southern and Southeastern Europe, stretching north-south direction across the border of Albania and the Republic of North Macedonia. The long mountain ridge is higher than for approximately , while the highest part, located in its very center, is Black Stone at high. Both countries have 50% of the mountain, Albania the west and North Macedonia the east. Jablanica Mountain contains many large mountain lakes. Shebenik mountain is located just to the west of Jablanica and give name to the Shebenik", "id": "3232652" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nThe Vlasina (Serbian Cyrillic: Власина), is a river in southeastern Serbia, a 70 km-long outflow of the Vlasina Lake and a right tributary to the Južna Morava, which also gives its name to the surrounding Vlasina region. The Vlasina flows out from the Vlasina Lake at an altitude of 1,213 m. Lake used to be a large, muddy peat bog, but in 1947-51 the Vlasina was dammed by the long, earth dam and the bog was turned into an artificial lake. The river flows to", "id": "14981330" }, { "contents": "Desná (Morava)\n\n\nDesná () is a river situated in Olomouc region of Czech republic, left tributary of the Morava. It is 43.4 km long, and its basin area is 338 km. The Desná river originates at the confluence of Hučivá Desná and Divoká Desná in Kouty nad Desnou, the village situated in deep valley of High Ash Mountains. The Desná then goes southwest through a valley toward the town of Šumperk. After approximately 43.4 km, the Desná flows into the Morava river near Postřelmov village.The mean annual discharge at its mouth", "id": "20977814" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nSerbian forces then headed south into the Morava valley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Muslims fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Turks fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Muslims departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessalonika. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in", "id": "1099566" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n, in the center of the region. Other larger towns include Trebinje, Stolac, Široki Brijeg, Posušje, Ljubuški, Grude, Konjic, and Čapljina. Borders between Herzegovina and Bosnia are unclear and often disputed. The upper flow of the Neretva River lies in northern Herzegovina, a heavily forested area with fast-flowing rivers and high mountains. Konjic and Jablanica lie in this area. The Neretva rises on Lebršnik Mountain, close to the Montenegro border, and as the river flows west, it enters Herzegovina. The entire", "id": "3021137" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nUpper Neretva, of the Neretva river from its source at 1,227 m.a.s.l. and headwaters gorge all the way to the town of Konjic is 90 km, flows from south to north - north-west as most of the Bosnia and Herzegovina rivers belonging to the Danube watershed, and cover some 1,390 km with average elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva briefly expanding into a wide valley which provides fertile agricultural land. There exists a large Jablaničko Lake, artificially formed after construction of dam near Jablanica. \"Second", "id": "16797216" }, { "contents": "Kubršnica\n\n\nThe Kubršnica (Serbian Cyrillic: Кубршница) is a river in Šumadija region of central Serbia, a 42 km-long left and the longest tributary to the Jasenica river. The Kubršnica originates from the Venčac mountain, in the Jasenica sub-region of Šumadija, in the wider area of the town of Aranđelovac. The terrain in the source area of the river is rich in marble and fireclay. The river flows to the east, next to the Aranđelovac's suburb of Banja and turns north near Topola. After the villages", "id": "5629731" }, { "contents": "Peć Bistrica\n\n\nkm-long, Rugovo glacier. The gorge is sparsely inhabited (the village of Mali Štupelj). As it comes out of the gorge, the Peć Bistrica reaches the town of Peć and enters the bottom of the Metohija depression through which it flows for the rest of its course. It runs parallel to the flows of the White Drin to the north and the Dečanska Bistrica to the south, next to the villages of Goraždevac, Lješane, Jablanica, Drenovce and Zaimovo, before it empties into the White Drin south of", "id": "15886949" }, { "contents": "Zlatibor\n\n\nsylvestris\" var. \"zlatiborica\" is a subspecies of pine originating from the mountain, and is endangered today. A hill by the name of Cigla\",\" located near the nearby village of Jablanica, still has some borderline markings of the Kingdom of Serbia, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Zlatibor itself is located in the northern part of the Stari Vlah region, a historical border region between Raška, Herzegovina and Bosnia. It spreads over an area of , in length, southeast to northwest, and up", "id": "3906304" }, { "contents": "Serbian Christmas traditions\n\n\nhousehold. The members of the group were called \"koledari\". The \"koleda\" was carried out from the Feast of Saint Ignatius Theophorus (five days before Christmas) up until the Epiphany. This custom was best preserved in the upper Pčinja District, and in the region around the River South Morava in the Jablanica District, southeastern Serbia. Regarded as pagan and discouraged by the Serbian Orthodox Church, the \"koleda\" ceased to be performed among most of the Serbs during the 19th and 20th centuries. \"Koledari\"", "id": "20573743" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwere designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of Medveđa have small numbers of Albanians and their descendants remained. This was due to a local Ottoman Albanian commander Shahid Pasha from the Jablanica area negotiating on good terms with Prince Milan and thereby guaranteeing their presence. Some other Albanians such as merchants attempted to remain in Niš, but they left after murders occurred and their property was sold off at low values. In 1879, some Albanian refugees from", "id": "1099570" }, { "contents": "Kosovo Pomoravlje\n\n\nThe region's largest cities are Gjilan and Bujanovac. The region is known as \"Kosovsko Pomoravlje\" (Косовско Поморавље, \"Morava Valley of Kosovo\") in Serbian and as Lugina e Anamoraves Binçes (\"Valley of Binač Morava\") in Albanian. Its name is derived from the Binač Morava River, which flows through northern Macedonia, eastern Kosovo and southern Serbia as part of the Great Morava river system. The region includes part of the valley and the Karadak and Koznik mountains. Gjilan has six municipalities and 287 smaller", "id": "13339352" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nAlbanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje, with the intention of then turning west and", "id": "17667142" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\nThe Resavčina (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресавчина) is a river in Serbia, a 32 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. It is sometimes also called \"Resavica\" or \"Resava\" (not to be confused with another Velika Morava's right tributary of Resava or its own tributary of Resavica). The Resavčina originates near the village of Proštinac in Svilajnac municipality. The river originally flows to the north, but soon turns west at the village of Dubnica and enters the western half of the Veliko Pomoravlje region", "id": "4886222" }, { "contents": "Ibar (river)\n\n\nThe Ibar, also known as the Ibër and Ibri (, , ), is a river that flows through eastern Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, with a total length of . The river begins in the Hajla mountain, in Rožaje, eastern Montenegro, and passes through Kosovo to flow into the West Morava river near Kraljevo, central Serbia. It belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area is , with an average discharge of 60 m³/s at the mouth. It is not navigable. The Ibar originates from", "id": "4536148" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Ilirska Bistrica\n\n\nJablanica (; ) is a settlement southeast of Ilirska Bistrica in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. Jablanica is the site of three known mass graves or unmarked graves from the end of the Second World War. They all contain the remains of German soldiers from the 97th Corps that were killed at the beginning of May 1945. The Mountain Fields Mass Grave (), also known as the Mountain Mass Grave (), lies in a meadow about 1.6 km northeast of Jablanica and contains the remains of 10 soldiers. The Solne Mass", "id": "16911511" }, { "contents": "Čezsoča\n\n\nČezsoča (; ) is a settlement in the Municipality of Bovec in the Littoral region of Slovenia. It includes the hamlets of Gorenja Vas (), Dolenja Vas (), Jablanica, Kršovec, and Na Glavi. Čezsoča lies in the valley on the left bank of the Soča River. The terrain then rises up towards Mount Polovnik (1,480 m). East of the settlement is Humčič Hill (810 m), behind which rises Mount Javoršček (1,557 m). Oplenk Creek flows through the village between Gorenja Vas and", "id": "14920585" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nJablanica, the Neretva enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching in depth. Three hydroelectric dams operate between Jablanica and Mostar. When the Neretva expands for the second and final time, it reaches its third section. This area is often colloquially called the \"\"Bosnian and Herzegovinian California\"\". The last of its course forms wide alluvial delta, before the river empties into the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Tatinac (also known as the", "id": "12890344" }, { "contents": "Jablaničko lake\n\n\nJablaničko lake () is a large artificially formed lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva briefly expands into a wide valley. River provided lot of fertile, agricultural land there, before lake flooded most of it. The lake was created in 1953 after construction of Jablanica Dam near Jablanica in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake has an irregular elongated shape. Its width varies along its length. The lake is a popular vacation destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Swimming, boating and especially fishing are popular activities", "id": "13828307" }, { "contents": "Jablanica Dam\n\n\nThe Jablanica Dam is an arch-gravity dam on the Neretva River about northeast of Jablanica in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The dam was constructed between 1947 and 1955 with the primary purpose of hydroelectric power production. The power station was commissioned in two stages, from 1955 until 1958. The first generator was commissioned in February 1955. An upgrade in 2008 increased the installed capacity of the power station from 150 MW to 180 MW. The dam's power station is located about to the southeast near Jablanica", "id": "854706" }, { "contents": "Jablanik\n\n\nJablanik (Serbian Cyrillic: Јабланик) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Valjevo. Its highest peak \"Jablanik\" has an elevation of 1,275 meters(10001020_ above sea level. Jablanik is located at the source of the river Jablanica. It is separated from nearby Medvednik mountain by high pass Stolica, while the Debelo Brdo saddle separates it from Povlen in the southeast. The highest peak has the same name as the mountain itself - Jablanik, and is 1,275 m high. The hills around the peak are mainly", "id": "366162" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\nThe Nišava or Nishava (Bulgarian and , ) is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia, a right tributary, and with a length of 218 km also the longest one, of the South Morava. The Nišava originates in western Bulgaria, in the Stara Planina mountains (east of Kom Peak) near the village of Gintsi. Its source is close to the Serbian border. It enters Serbia after 67 km of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries. Because it flows through Gintsi, the upper course of the river is", "id": "9627075" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nAfter Mramorac village, the Jasenica spills over in several parallel flows, which continue until its confluence. After the Pridvorica and Vodice villages (on different arms of the river), the Jasenica reaches the town of Smederevska Palanka, the most populous settlement in its valley. This is also where the Kubršnica, its main tributary, flows into it from the left. The Jasenica then gently bends to the east, flowing into the Great Morava near the village of Veliko Orašje (the southern arm of the river flows through the town", "id": "3481502" }, { "contents": "Gruža (river)\n\n\nThe Gruža (Serbian Cyrillic: Гружа, ) is a river in central Serbia. The river is a 62 km long left tributary to the Zapadna Morava. The Gruža originates in the central part of the Rudnik mountain, right under the mountain's main settlement, the village of Rudnik, northeast of the town of Gornji Milanovac, central Serbia. The river flows south next to the village of Majdan, around the Rudnik mountain into the Takovo region and at the village of Nevade, just few kilometers away from Gornji Milanovac,", "id": "10971320" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\n(hamlet Panjak) on the Serbian-Bosnian border Crni Rzav meets the Jablanica river at the village Gornje Vardište and finally the river Beli Rzav at the village of Donje Vardište. The Rzav continues as the natural extension of the Beli Rzav, but since the Black Rzav is longer, the latter is considered to be the main headstream. It floes between the southernmost part of the Zvijezda mountain (\"Ponos\" peak) from the north and the Suha Gora mountain from the south, next to the villages of Prosjek (and", "id": "11540155" }, { "contents": "Ub (river)\n\n\nThe Ub (Serbian Cyrillic: Уб) is a river in western Serbia, a 57 km-long right and longest tributary to Tamnava river. The Ub originates from the Vlašić mountain in Podgorina region of west Serbia, near the village of Kasapo. From its source to the mouth, the river flows to the east, parallel to the river Tamnava, which it will eventually join. The villages located in the upper section of the river's flow are Družetić, Pambukovica and Čučuge, where the Ub slightly turns to the", "id": "2261401" }, { "contents": "Olomouc Region\n\n\nof the region is situated on the water level of the Morava River near to Kojetín in the Přerov District (190 m above sea level). The Morava river flows through the region and the majority of the region's territory belongs to Morava’s drainage basin. A small northern part of the region belongs to the drainage basin of Odra River, which flows to the Baltic Sea. The Olomouc Region offers a great variety of natural points of interest. Protected landscape area of the Jeseníky mountains offers a number of scenic places such", "id": "11419394" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina\n\n\nJablanica is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is situated on the Neretva river and Jablanica lake. The municipality of Jablanica is a major tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The municipality offer a wide variety of activities. The surrounding mountains such as Plasa, Čvrsnica and Prenj offer both hunting grounds and a variety of hiking trails. One popular hiking destination is \"Hajdučka Vrata\", a natural wonder, the product of wind", "id": "9009264" }, { "contents": "Krupá (Morava)\n\n\nKrupá (German: Graupa Bach) is a creek in Šumperk District, Moravia, left tributary of the Morava. Its length is 19,2 km and its drainage basin covers 112.7 km2. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 4.48 m³/s. The Krupá originates in Czech part of the Śnieżnik Mountains, 400 meters above sea level. The Krupá then goes south toward the town of Staré Město. It flows into the Morava river near Hanušovice town. River keeps its natural character with meanders and original riversides. A river bottom is", "id": "1745557" }, { "contents": "Oskava (river)\n\n\nOskava is a river in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic, left tributary of the Morava river. Its length is 50.3 km and its drainage basin covers 569 km. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 3.53 m/s. The Oskava originates from southeast slope of Kamenná hora in Hrubý Jeseník, 215 meters above sea level. The river is surrounded by woods in upper reaches, flows through hills of Nízký Jeseník in middle reaches and its lower reaches is situated in swampy floodplain of Litovelské Pomoraví Protected Landscape Area.", "id": "8538845" }, { "contents": "Crna Trava\n\n\nCrna Trava ( ) is a village and municipality located in the Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to 2011 census, the population of the village is 434 inhabitants, while population of the municipality is 1,663. This is the smallest by population and poorest municipality in Serbia. Crna Trava is famous for its migrant builders, who are considered the best in the region and are colloquially described as \"building half of Yugoslavia\". The name of the village in Serbian translates to \"Black Grass\". The origin of the name", "id": "18032485" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\n. At the village of Kušiljevo, the river receives the small stream of \"Beljeva\" from the left and turns northward, which is the general direction of its course for the rest of the flow. The river flows parallel to the Velika Morava river as its satellite flow, in the Morava's floodplain, so there are no settlements on the Resavica itself, but several large villages are located in its valley (Porodin, Žabari, Simićevo, Aleksandrovac Požarevački, Vlaški Do, Poljana), all of them located on the", "id": "4886223" }, { "contents": "Lugomir\n\n\nThe Lugomir (Serbian Cyrillic: Лугомир) is a river in central Serbia, a 57 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. The Lugomir originates from two headstreams, the Dulenska reka and the Županjevačka reka. The shorter headstream of Županjevačka reka (Cyrillic: \"Жупањевачка река\") originates from the mountain of Gledićke planine in southern Šumadija region of central Serbia. Its spring is just some 500 m away from the source of Lugomir's another headstream, the Dulenska reka. The river first flows to the east", "id": "5130918" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\ncities in Serbia, 10 km after which the Nišava empties into the Južna Morava. However, with the rapid growth of Niš in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs, the banks of the Nišava are urbanized almost to its mouth. After being divided into districts in 1992, the Nišava District (with Niš as administrative center) is named after the river. The river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area covers 4,086 km, of which about 73% in Serbia, the rest in Bulgaria", "id": "9627077" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nsection\" begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama river between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes a southern course and enter a largest canyons of its course, running through steep slopes of magnificent mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching 800–1200 meters in depth. From here Neretva flows toward the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Jezernica (also Tatinac), the Gornji and Donji Krupac, the Ljuta-Dindolka, the Jesenica, the Bjelimićka Rijeka, the Slatinica, the Račica, the Rakitnica, the Konjička", "id": "16797217" }, { "contents": "Resava (river)\n\n\nThe Resava (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресава) is a river in central Serbia, a 65 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava. It also gives the name to the surrounding Resava region, the Resava Monastery, the coal mines in its valley and a popular tourist destination of Resava Cave. The Resava originates from the Homolje region in eastern Serbia. It springs out at an altitude of 1,100 m and flows westward between the mountains of Beljanica (on the north) and Kučaj (on the south). In its", "id": "15040274" }, { "contents": "A1 motorway (Serbia)\n\n\nJužna Morava river. Southern section (Niš–Leskovac–Vranje–Macedonian border) consists of 128 km that are in service, while additional 26 km are under construction. Construction of southern section has been completed by May 2019, and last sections opened for traffic on 18 May 2019: Highway passes through valley of South Morava, passes west of Niš, by Merošina and Leskovac, and after Grdelica built highway ends. 26 kilometers of highway under construction passes through Grdelica gorge, very difficult terrain. This sections is often considered", "id": "1785427" }, { "contents": "Čivelj\n\n\nČivelj is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in the municipality of Jablanica, Herzegovina-Neretva Canton, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1991, the village had six inhabitants, all of whom were Muslims. In 2013, Čivelj had 10 inhabitants. Tourism is solid. Civelj is placed 8 kilometres from Jablanica and it is placed on Jablanica lake. In lake there are 5 types of fishes including the most popular \"pastrmka\". The village was found in 1911. by local fishermen. Near Civelj", "id": "4645021" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nAlthough these streams are of low outflow, there are also numerous wellsprings rising on both sides of the canyon at the river banks, with high-capacity discharge. Three large hydroelectric power stations operate in this section of the Neretva, between Jablanica and Mostar, namely Grabovica HPP, Salakovac HPP and Mostar HPP. Jablanica lake is a large artificial lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva expands into a wide valley. The river provided fertile, agricultural land before the lake flooded most of it. The lake", "id": "12890353" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nThe Jasenica (Serbian Cyrillic: Јасеница, ) is a river in central Serbia. It is long and is the left tributary of the Great Morava. This river gives the name to the surrounding region. The Jasenica originates from several streams, most notably the Đurinci (Cyrillic: Ђуринци) from Venčac mountain, and the Srebrenica (Cyrillic: Сребреница) from the northern slopes of the Rudnik mountain in central Serbia. At its origin, the river runs through the eastern border of the Kačer region. It flows to the southeast", "id": "3481500" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nin north Skopje, Macedonia. The streams Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is, after passing the Macedonian-Serbian border, known as the Binačka Morava. After 49 km it meets the Preševska Moravica at Bujanovac, and for the remainder, 246 km, flows as the South Morava. The South Morava belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and its own drainage area is 15,696 km², of which 1,237 km² is in Bulgaria (through its right tributary Nišava). Its average", "id": "15699472" }, { "contents": "Pešter\n\n\nRivers Uvac, Vapa, Jablanica and Grabovica flow through the plateau. In the geologic past, the field was a large lake, of which only a small Sjenica lake near the village of Tuzinje remained. The soil is mostly karst interspersed with pastures. Economy of the area relies primarily on cattle breeding, chiefly sheep. Pešter is famous for its dairy products, especially the \"Sjenica cheese\" (\"Sjenički sir\"), as well as lamb and prosciutto. The plateau is sparsely populated: most settlements are on the", "id": "16748290" }, { "contents": "Sredačka župa\n\n\nSredačka Župa (; \"county of Sredska\") is a remote geographical region, a valley, in southeastern Kosovo, below the Šar Mountains at the source of the Prizrenska Bistrica. The region, an oval basin, lies below the Šar Mountains, at the source, upper stream of the Prizrenska Bistrica (\"Prizren river\"). South of the region between the Prizren mountains and Koritnik mountain, lies the Gora region. It currently includes Sredska, Pousko, Jablanica, Lokvica, Rečane, Živinjane, Planjane, Nebregošte,", "id": "13372292" }, { "contents": "Binačka Morava\n\n\nBinačka Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Биначка Морава; ) or (\"Mirusha\") is a river which flows in southeastern Kosovo and North Macedonia. It flows generally in the southwest to northeast direction, from Macedonian border to Bujanovac, where, after 49 km, meets Preševska Moravica, to create South Morava. The river begins in the mountain of Skopska Crna Gora, in North Macedonia, north of its capital Skopje. Streams of Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is,", "id": "12867615" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwar, the Albanian population depending on the area reacted differently to incoming Serbian forces by either offering resistance or fleeing toward nearby mountains and Ottoman Kosovo. Although most of these Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces, a small presence was allowed to remain in the Jablanica valley where their descendants live today. Serbs from Lab moved to Serbia during and after the first round of hostilities in 1876, while incoming Albanian refugees thereafter 1878 repopulated their villages. Albanian refugees also settled alongside the north-eastern Ottoman-Serbian border, in urban areas", "id": "1099553" }, { "contents": "Banjska River\n\n\nThe Banjska River ( / \"Banjska reka\", \"Baths River\"), is a river in southern Serbia, the right tributary of Toplica in which it flows near Kuršumlija. It rises under the far south-eastern branch of Kopaonik. It is 22 km long, with a river basin area of 155 km². The average flow at the mouth is 0,7 m³/s. The valley of the river is mostly ravines, while the basin is rich in forest. The Kuršumlija-Kuršumlijska Banja-Prepolac Pass-Podujevo-", "id": "14979528" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nby a catastrophic flood. Then unregulated river Jablanica, swollen after a long rainy period, broke on June 6, spilled out of its banks and caused enormous material damage Lebane. Flood toll was paid and human victims (killed two people). After this tragic event, with financial help, Lebane begins to industrialize faster, and the process of industrialization has caused more versatile and faster development of the city. According to the 2011 census, the municipality has 22,000 inhabitants. The ethnic composition of the municipality: The following table", "id": "17523935" }, { "contents": "Čvrsnica\n\n\nČvrsnica () is a mountain in the Dinarides of Bosnia and Herzegovina, located in northern Herzegovina, most of the mountain is located in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton municipalities of Mostar and Jablanica while the smaller part of the mountain, around 10% is located in the municipality of Posušje. The highest peak (Pločno) is 2228 metres. Čvrsnica is surrounded by the river Neretva from the east (20 km), its tributaries Doljanka (18 km) from the north and Drežanka (19.8 km) from the south,", "id": "6129606" }, { "contents": "Myjava (river)\n\n\nThe Myjava River is a river in western Slovakia and for a small part in the Czech Republic and left tributary of the Morava River. It rises in the White Carpathians near the village of Nová Lhota in Moravia, but crosses the Czech-Slovak border shortly afterwards and flows in a southern direction until the town of Myjava, where it enters the Myjava Hills and turns west. Near Sobotište it flows into the Záhorie Lowland and turns south until the village of Jablonica, turning northwest and from Senica it flows west, passing through", "id": "2099838" }, { "contents": "West Morava\n\n\nSouth and Great Morava's meridian (south-to-north) flow, the West Morava runs in an opposed, latitudinal (west-to-east) direction, dividing the region of Šumadija of the central Serbia from the southern parts of the country. Due to the West Morava's direction, it flows between many mountains, regions and sub-regions: The West Morava river valley, Zapadno Pomoravlje, is economically the most developed of all three Morava river valleys. With the valley of the Ibar, the West", "id": "7786624" }, { "contents": "Ralja (river)\n\n\nThe Ralja () is a river in Šumadija region of Serbia, a 51 km long left tributary to the Jezava, a tributary of the Great Morava river. It also gives its name to the surrounding Šumadija's subregion of Ralja. The Ralja originates from the northern part of the Kosmaj mountain, north of the village of Velika Ivanča, in the Sopot municipality of the City of Belgrade. Almost from the source, the river valley is a route for the Belgrade-Niš railway. At the villages of Popović and Mali", "id": "2491229" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nBovan gorge carved by the river and is very popular local and regional tourist destination, especially among campers and fishermen, but the coastline is not put in order. The river continues to the south, in an inverse flow, and after the villages of Subotinac and Kraljevo, it empties into the Južna Morava at the town of Aleksinac. The lower section used to be a coal mining area too, just like the upper one, but the mines (Aleksinački Rudnik) are closed now. The Sokobanjska Moravica brlongs to the Black", "id": "1726358" }, { "contents": "Golijska Moravica\n\n\nThe Golijska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Голијска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in western Serbia. With a length of 98 km, it is the longer headstream of the Zapadna Morava (it forms it with the Đetinja), and thus, of the Velika Morava. Its name, Moravica, means \"little Morava\" in Serbian, and it also gives its name to the surrounding region and the modern Moravica District of Serbia. The Golijska Moravica originates from the western slopes of the Golija mountain and flows", "id": "5380325" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\n. The Nišava is not navigable. It is not only the longest tributary of the Južna Morava, but also the largest one in terms of discharge (36 km/s). It has many smaller tributaries, the most important being the Temštica from the right, and the Jerma (or Sukovska reka), Crvena reka, Koritnička reka and Kutinska reka from the left. The Nišava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia: the route follows the valleys of the Morava", "id": "9627078" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nThe Toplica (Serbian Cyrillic: Топлица, ) is a river in southern Serbia. The river is 130 km long and gives its name to the region it flows through, which constitutes most of the modern Toplica District of Serbia. The Toplica originates under the name of \"Duboka\" from the eastern slopes of the Kopaonik mountain, just south of the highest peak, Pančićev vrh. It flows to the southeast, on the western slopes of the Lepa Gora mountain, next to the villages of Merćez, Selova, Žuč,", "id": "19530451" }, { "contents": "Great Morava\n\n\nof the Velika Morava's right tributary Resava). The average discharge of the Velika Morava on its confluence with Danube is 255 m³/s (120 m³/s brought by Zapadna Morava, 100 m³/s by Južna Morava, and 35 m³/s amounted by the Velika Morava itself). Tributaries of the Velika Morava are short, the longest one being the Jasenica (79 km) and others rarely exceeding 50 km. Right tributaries are: Jovanovačka reka, Crnica, Ravanica, Resava and Resavica (or Resavčina). Left tributaries are more numerous,", "id": "2295702" }, { "contents": "Vevčani\n\n\nVevčani () is a village in the Republic of North Macedonia. It is the only settlement and seat of Vevčani Municipality. The village of Vevčani is found in the southwestern range at the foot of the Jablanica mountain range. It is situated from 800 – 950 metres above sea level. The village is located 14 km North-West of the town of Struga. The village is situated near the villages of Oktisi, Velešta, Podgorci, Gorna Belica with the Albanian border to the West of the village. The famous Vevčani", "id": "5042995" } ]
The Jablanica ( Serbian : Јабланица , ) is an river in southern Serbia . A left tributary of the South ( or Južna ) Morava river , it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia 's Jablanica District , with the region contributing about one third of the district 's area . The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain , near the village of Grbavce , on the administrative border of the Kosovo province . The area is rich in thermal springs , so several spas are located near the river : Stara Banja , Ravna Banja and Sijarina with popular Sijarinska Banja . At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary Čokotinska reka ( Cyrillic : Чокотинска река ) , turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point . The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the and Radan mountains , in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the in [START_ENT] Kosovo [END_ENT] . The river flows eastward , passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo , before reaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac , part of the depression of Leskovac , which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava . In the region , near Lebane , a famed archeological find of ( Iustiniana Prima ) is located . The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo , Vranovce , Bošnjace , Turekovac and Stopanje , reaches Vinarce , the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac , and turns north . First it flows parallel to the Veternica river , to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje , then parallel to the Južna Morava . After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava . From Pečenjevce , a parallel flow ( canal ) begins , connecting the Jablanica and s , some 15 km to the north . Through Južna Morava , the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin , draining an area of 895 km ² itself . It 's not navigable and has an average discharge of 6 m ³ / s , which in rainy years grows much higher , so the river floods its valley causing lots of material damage . The name of the river , Jablanica , in Serbian means the
54e20311-24fc-47ea-8ba2-ee602d131d06_river:9
[{"answer": "Kosovo", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "17391", "title": "Kosovo"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nreaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac, part of the depression of Leskovac, which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. In the region, near Lebane, a famed archeological find of Caričin grad (\"Iustiniana Prima\") is located. The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo, Vranovce, Bošnjace, Turekovac and Stopanje, reaches Vinarce, the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac", "id": "3481303" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\n, and turns north. First it flows parallel to the Veternica river, to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje, then parallel to the Južna Morava. After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava. From Pečenjevce, a parallel flow (canal) begins, connecting the Jablanica and Toplica rivers, some 15 km to the north. Through Južna Morava, the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, draining an area of itself. It's not navigable", "id": "3481304" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\npopular Sijarinska Banja. At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary \"Čokotinska reka\" (Cyrillic: \"Чокотинска река\"), turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point. The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the Majdan and Radan mountains, in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the District of Priština in Kosovo. The river flows eastward, passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo, before", "id": "3481302" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nThe Jablanica (, ) is an river in southern Serbia. A left tributary of the South (or Južna) Morava river, it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia's Jablanica District, with the region contributing about one third of the district's area. The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain, near the village of Grbavce, on the border with Kosovo. The area is rich in thermal springs, so several spas are located near the river: Stara Banja, Ravna Banja and Sijarina with", "id": "3481301" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nJablanica with third parallel flow, the \"Sušica\", being formed in between. Settlements include many small villages, like Vina, Bukova Gora, Miroševce, Žabljane, Beli Potok and Strojkovce. In the Leskovac field, the river gently turns north, receives the Sušica from the left and reaches the town of Leskovac. The Veternica continues northward, being connected to the Jablanica river by the canal at the village of Bogojevce, before it empties into the Južna Morava. The Veternica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its", "id": "11539775" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nThe Veternica (Serbian Cyrillic: Ветерница, ) is a river in southern Serbia, a 75 km long left tributary to the Južna Morava, which gives the name to the region surrounding its valley. The Veternica originates from the Grot peak, the southernmost part of the Kukavica mountain. Four smaller streams meet at the village of Vlase and continue to the north as the Veternica. The river flows next to the villages of Golemo Selo, Oštra Glava and Gagince, where it flows parallel to the Jablanica river. As the Veternica", "id": "11539773" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nbends to the northeast, it enters the low Veternica region, part of the Leskovac field in the composite valley of the Južna Morava. Small region, located between the Kukavica mountain on the south and the Jablanica region on the north, is divided in two micro-regions, upper one being centered on the small town of Vučje (which is not located on the river itself) while the center of the lower micro-region is the town of Leskovac. As it enters the region, the Veternica furthers away from the", "id": "11539774" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nthe west, Kukavica and Čemernik in the south and Babička Gora, Seličevica and Suva Planina to the east. The largest river in the region of Leskovac is the South Morava River, which flows south to north. Tributaries of the South Morava are: the Vlasina river, which collects water from Lake Vlasina and flows through Crna Trava and Vlasotince; the Veternica river, which flows through Leskovac; the Jablanica river, which springs from the foot of Goljak and flows through Medveđa and Lebane; the Pusta (Deserted) river,", "id": "2857704" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nof 590 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and is not navigable. The region of Pusta Reka mostly correspondence with the river's watershed. It is located between the Pasjača mountain and lower Toplica region (on the north), the Southern Pomoravlje (Field of Leskovac, on the east), the Jablanica region (on the south) and the Radan mountain (on the west). The region is an agricultural area, almost without any industry, except for some smaller facilities in regional center, Bojnik", "id": "12523581" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nof Podina, Voljčince, Badnjevac and the smaller regional center Žitorađa. After the Toplica reaches municipal center of Doljevac, it enters the most densely populated part of the south Pomoravlje, turns north and flows into the Južna Morava at the village of Orljane, across the medieval ruins of Kurvin grad, as Južna Morava's longest left tributary. The Toplica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its own drainage area of 2,217 km². The river is not navigable. The river valley is a major traffic route in southern Serbia as", "id": "19530454" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nThe Sokobanjska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Сокобањска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in central eastern Serbia, a 58 km-long right tributary to the Južna Morava river. The Sokobanjska Moravica originates from the eastern slopes of the Devica mountain, near the village of Skrobnica. The river flows to the north, turns westward at the village of Levovik and enters the Banja region. The rivers flows between the northern slopes of the Devica and Ozren mountains (on the south) and southern slopes of the Rtanj mountain", "id": "1726356" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\nmouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. As the wider Jabllanica region, Medveđa also had an Albanian majority. These Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces in a way that today would be characterized as ethnic cleansing. Due to depopulation and economic considerations some small numbers of Albanians were allowed to stay and return though not to their previous settlements and instead were designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of", "id": "7117787" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\n, a notable Muslim population existed in the districts of Niš, Pirot, Vranje, Leskovac, Prokuplje and Kuršumlija. The rural parts of Toplica, Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the", "id": "1099558" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nthe southernmost slopes of the Suva Planina and Babička Gora mountains, it reaches the town of Vlasotince and western parts of the low Leskovac field, part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. After the villages of Batulovce and Stajkovce, the Vlasina empties into the Južna Morava, east of the Leskovac's eastern suburb of Mrštane. The Vlasina drains an area of 991 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin and it is not navigable. On 26 June 1988, after a period of heavy rains, Vlasina was a", "id": "14981332" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nThe Pusta River ( / \"Pusta reka\", \"Desolate River\") is a river in southern Serbia, a 71-km long left tributary to the South Morava. It also gives the name to the Pusta Reka region in its valley. The river originates northeast of Prolom Banja, near the Sokolovica village, on the northern tip of the Radan mountain, as the \"Golema River\" (\"Big River\"). It flows eastward, between the mountains of Radan (to the south) and Pasjača (to the", "id": "12523579" }, { "contents": "Persecution of Muslims during Ottoman contraction\n\n\nReka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the Turks were of Albanian origin. The Muslims in the cities of Niš and Pirot were Turkish-speaking; Vranje and Leskovac were Turkish- and Albanian-speaking; Prokuplje", "id": "8891598" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nvalley between Konjic and Jablanica, known simply as \"Neretva\" since Middle Ages, the new point for hydrographical division became dam of the Jablanica HPP where also is a place of confluence of the rivers Neretva and Rama. Here the Neretva river suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before it reach town of Jablanica. From this point it turns again toward south and enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes of the mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica", "id": "12890350" }, { "contents": "Rama (Neretva)\n\n\nRama is a river in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a major tributary of the Neretva. It joins it from the right by discharging into Neretva's artificial reservoir, Jablaničko lake, at place called Marina Pećina, near village of Gračac, between location of underground powerhouse of Rama Hydroelectric Power Station and Jablanica Dam, depending on water level in Jablaničko lake, some 15 kilometers upstream from Jablanica. The Rama flows through municipalities of Prozor-Rama and Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, while its headwaters together with wellsprings in the region of", "id": "3052779" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\nThe Kolubara (Serbian Cyrillic: Колубара, ), is a long river in western Serbia; it is an eastern, right tributary to the Sava river. Kolubara is formed by the two small rivers Obnica and Jablanica. \"Obnica\" is the river in Western Serbia that springs at the foot of the mountain Medvednik. It flows to the East, through the villages of Suvodanje, Bobova, Majinović, Pričević and Zlatarić, and at the city of Valjevo meets the river \"Jablanica\" and forms Kolubara. The Obnica is", "id": "20109582" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\ndating to the 4th century AD lay at various locations of the town, as it was a transitory zone of Upper Moesia; travel and postal stations are among the finds. Toponyms such as \"Arbanaška\" and \"Đjake\" shows an Albanian presence in the Toplica and Southern Morava regions (located north-east of contemporary Kosovo) before the expulsion of Albanians during 1877–1878 period. The rural parts of Jablanica valley and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river", "id": "7117786" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\naverage elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva again expands into a third and largest valley which provided fertile agricultural land before it was flooded by large artificial reservoir, Jablaničko Lake, formed after construction of a Jablanica Dam near town of Jablanica. The second section begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before reaches town of Jablanica, from which point turns again toward south. From", "id": "12890343" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nLebane () is a town and municipality located in Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 10,062 inhabitants, while the municipality has 20,000 inhabitants. The town is located at the confluence of the rivers Jablanica and Šumanska Reka, in the alluvial plain created by the former. Just northeast of the town a larger plain called Leskovačko polje extends toward the town of Leskovac, which is the district seat. The elevation of the town of Lebane is between 275.2 and 420 MASL.", "id": "17523929" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nRakic writes about it as a \"\"big village populated by Serbs, in a valley, on the river Jablanica, on its left bank.\"\" Only when Lebane got the role of Jablanica district headquarters, it began to gradually develop in a direction of a small town. The core of this small town was a series of houses along the Jablanica which is 45m wide here (as is even now); at the end of this series are the buildings of the Court and Municipality. The main feature of", "id": "17523931" }, { "contents": "Štulac (Lebane)\n\n\nthe village of Prekopčelica. The village is located on the valley slopes of the Caričin Potok creek. It is scattered between the altitudes of . It is situated in the wider Pusta Reka region. The village rests on the western slopes of the , which here divides the regions of Pusta Reka and Jablanica. On the west, the easternmost slopes of the Radan mountain begin. The village area covers . The Slavs settled in the area in the 7th century, centering around the ruins of Iustiniana Prima. Due to the lack of", "id": "11151840" }, { "contents": "Grdelica\n\n\nGrdelica () is a town in southern Serbia. It is situated in the Leskovac municipality, in the Jablanica District. The total population of the town was 3,194 people as of the 2011 census. For census purposes, Grdelica is divided into two adjacent parts, southern \"Grdelica town\" (\"Grdelica varoš\"; population 2,136) and northern \"Grdelica village\" (\"Grdelica selo\"; 1,058). Grdelica lies at the South Morava river, on the mountainous terrain at the entrance of the Grdelica Gorge. It", "id": "460756" }, { "contents": "Gornji Bučumet\n\n\nall settlements registered separately in the census. The three settlements lie in the South Morava basin, above the Jablanica river, and as such are located in the Upper Jablanica region. The highest mountain in Upper Bučumet is Paramid (853), with the mountain of Sv. Petar (1149) being located in Middle Bučumet. The three neighbourhoods of Bučumet are 470 to 853 metres above sea level. There is a medieval church built on the ruins of an older church. During the Toplica-Jablanica Operation (, ) in", "id": "12752738" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nthe huge floods of its daughter river. The South Morava has 157 tributaries. The most important left tributaries are: Jablanica, Veternica, Pusta reka and Toplica. Right tributaries are: Vrla, Vlasina, Nišava (the longest) and Sokobanjska Moravica. The South Morava has a significant potential for electricity production, and a huge hydroelectrical system (Vlasina- Vrla I-IV power stations) has been constructed in its drainage basin. To a certain extent, its waters are used for irrigation. The river valley's most important role", "id": "15699476" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nThe Rasina () is a river in south central Serbia. The long river flows through the Rasina region, gives its name to the modern Rasina District of Serbia, and flows into the Zapadna Morava near the city of Kruševac. Its historical name is Arsen (Αρσεγα). The Rasina springs from the southern slopes of the Goč mountain, near the village of Rašovka, southwest of the most famous Serbian spa, Vrnjačka Banja. The river originally flows to the southeast, around the mountains of Željin and Kopaonik, next to", "id": "209716" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nLeskovac (Serbian Cyrillic: Лесковац, ) is a city and the administrative center of the Jablanica District in southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the city urban area has 60,288 inhabitants, while the city administrative area has 144,206. Traces of life of the Brnjica culture (8th century BC) is seen at the Hisar Hill (Hisar Leskovac) that was protected by a deep moat with a palisade on its inner side, a fortification similar to that of another fortification on the site near Zlokućane in the Velika Morava basin", "id": "2857693" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nThe favorable location and the richness of nature made Jablanica valley important place since the earliest times. Traffic affordable and fertile, Leskovac valley has provided favorable conditions for the settlement of population. Archaeological findings, of which the most important are Hissar and Caričin grad (Iustiniana Prima) show that life in this area, continuously evolved from prehistoric man to date. First mention of Lebane as Hlebane dates back to 1512. Lebane is formed as a village of the same name after the liberation in 1878. Visiting Serbia in 1880s, M.", "id": "17523930" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nThe South Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Јужна Морава, Serbian Latin: \"Južna Morava\", ; ) is a river in eastern Kosovo and in southern Serbia, which represents the shorter headwater of Great Morava. Today, it is 295 km long, including its source river Binačka Morava. It flows generally in the south to north direction, from Macedonian border to Kosovo and onwards to Central Serbia, where it meets West Morava at Stalać, to create Great Morava. The river rises in the Skopska Crna Gora mountain", "id": "15699471" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\nis the Rzav's longer headstream. It originates from the Čigota mountain, eastern section of the Zlatibor mountain. The river originally flows northward, next to the villages of Vodice and Jokina Ćuprija, reaches the central section of the Zlatibor where it is dammed and creates the artificial Ribnica lake (surface area of 10 km²), after the nearby village of Ribnica. After the lake, the river sharply turns west and soon gets followed by the parallel stream of the \"Jablanica\" river. After crossing the village of Mokra Gora", "id": "11540154" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\n25 km long. Jablanica originates on the eastern slopes of the Jablanik mountain, just few kilometers away from Obnica. It curves around Parač mountain and next to the village of Balinović, before it meets Obnica in Valjevo. Jablanica is 21.5 km long. This is also the beginning of the long region of the Kolubara valley, divided in two large parts, referred to as Upper (\"gornja\") Kolubara and Lower (\"donja\") Kolubara (around the Belgrade's suburb of Obrenovac). At Valjevo, the", "id": "20109583" }, { "contents": "Jablanica District\n\n\nThe Jablanica District (, ) is one of nine administrative districts of Southern and Eastern Serbia. It expands in the south-eastern parts of Serbia. According to the 2011 census results, it has a population of 215,463 inhabitants. The administrative center of the district is the city of Leskovac. The district encompasses the municipalities of: According to the 2011 census results, the Jablanica Distract has a total population of 216,304 inhabitants. Ethnic composition of the Jablanica District: Famous cultural-historic monuments in this District are: the Roman", "id": "13223854" }, { "contents": "Kalna, Crna Trava\n\n\nKalna () is a small village in the Crna Trava municipality of the Jablanica District of Serbia. Kalna village is an old Serbian village, 35 km away from the Crna Trava. It is located between Tumba and Serbian-Bulgarian border, at an altitude of 500 to 1100 m. The total area is rural area of 7285 hectares. The Kalna can be reached from three directions: The road in this way was there since the Turkish rule. It was the shortest connection of Leskovac valley (Dubočica) to Sofia and Constantinople", "id": "11211518" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina-Neretva Canton\n\n\ntook place there during World War II and there is a large museum in Jablanica dedicated to these battles. The Neretva river runs through the cities of Konjic, Jablanica, Mostar and Čapljina before it flows through Croatia and into the Adriatic Sea. There are large lakes in the canton such as the Jablanica lake located around the city Jablanica. The southern most municipality in the canton is the Neum municipality which borders the Adriatic sea and the eastern most municipality is the Ravno municipality along the border with Croatia. Of the ten cantons comprising", "id": "3225485" }, { "contents": "Vardar Corps\n\n\nThe Vardar Corps was a corps of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland (JVuO) that operated on the left bank of the river Vardar during the World War II in Yugoslavia on the territory of modern-day North Macedonia and southern Serbia. Its commander was former Captain of the Royal Guard of the Royal Yugoslav Army Stojan Krstić. It consisted of four brigades with total number of 1,000 soldiers. Together with Jablanica Corps, South Morava Corps and Flying Corps it belonged under \"Mountain Staff 110\" () located in Sijarinska Banja", "id": "11325997" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nthe villages of Mitrovo Polje, Bzenica, Pleš, Jablanica, Grčak, Toskići, Budilovina and Milentija. When the Rasina reaches the small town of Brus, it enters the upper Rasina region and continues next to the villages of Tršanovci, Lepenac and Razbojna. At this point the river reaches the western side of the Veliki Jastrebac mountain, and makes a wide, elbow turn to the north. In this part of the course, the Rasina also makes a southeast border of the Aleksandrovačka Župa region. After the villages of Bogiše", "id": "209717" }, { "contents": "Doljanka\n\n\nDoljanka is a right tributary of Neretva river in North Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The length of Doljanka is around 18 km and reaches an altitude drop of about 400 m. Arises from sources scattered type under the far northeast slopes of Vran mountain on altitude of 1324 m. It runs through limestone canyon, which is high up to 1,200 m and flows through the village of Doljani. Doljanka flows into the Neretva River between Jablanica and Mostar, at an altitude of 300 m. It is also the connection over which trouts from the Neretva", "id": "8874715" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nValley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Albanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje", "id": "17667163" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n. The Neretva then flows northwest, through Konjic. It enters the Jablanica Reservoir (\"Jablaničko jezero\"), one of the largest in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake ends near the town of Jablanica. From here on, the Neretva turns southward, continuing to the Adriatic Sea. With the mountains lining its shores gradually receding, the Neretva enters a valley where the city of Mostar lies. It flows under the old bridge (\"Stari most\") and continues, now wider, toward the town of Čapljina and", "id": "3021139" }, { "contents": "Radan (mountain)\n\n\nRadan (Serbian Cyrillic: Радан) is a mountain in southern Serbia, near the town of Kuršumlija. Its highest peak, Šopot, has an elevation of 1,408 meters above sea level. Radan separates the valleys of the Toplica and Jablanica rivers. It is well covered with deciduous and evergreen forests. The best known spot on Radan is the Devil's Town – a peculiar rock formation consisting of hundreds of mushroom-like posts, located on its southern slopes. Near the Devil's Town there are ruins of Ivanova kula –", "id": "3957176" }, { "contents": "Crni Timok\n\n\nкотлина, \"depression of Crna Reka\"), populated with many smaller villages (Lukovo, Jablanica, Valakonje, Savinac, Gamzigrad, Zvezdan). At Gamzigrad there is also an important archeological site from Roman times. After a flow of 84 km, the Crni Timok reaches Zaječar, where it joins the Beli Timok River, forming the Veliki Timok River. It drains an area of . Early in its course it receives from the right the Radovanska, Suva, Velika, Salešča, Šarbanovačka, Jasenova, Bajnska and Suva", "id": "11459489" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (mountain range)\n\n\nJablanica ( ; ) is a mountain range in Southern and Southeastern Europe, stretching north-south direction across the border of Albania and the Republic of North Macedonia. The long mountain ridge is higher than for approximately , while the highest part, located in its very center, is Black Stone at high. Both countries have 50% of the mountain, Albania the west and North Macedonia the east. Jablanica Mountain contains many large mountain lakes. Shebenik mountain is located just to the west of Jablanica and give name to the Shebenik", "id": "3232652" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nThe Vlasina (Serbian Cyrillic: Власина), is a river in southeastern Serbia, a 70 km-long outflow of the Vlasina Lake and a right tributary to the Južna Morava, which also gives its name to the surrounding Vlasina region. The Vlasina flows out from the Vlasina Lake at an altitude of 1,213 m. Lake used to be a large, muddy peat bog, but in 1947-51 the Vlasina was dammed by the long, earth dam and the bog was turned into an artificial lake. The river flows to", "id": "14981330" }, { "contents": "Desná (Morava)\n\n\nDesná () is a river situated in Olomouc region of Czech republic, left tributary of the Morava. It is 43.4 km long, and its basin area is 338 km. The Desná river originates at the confluence of Hučivá Desná and Divoká Desná in Kouty nad Desnou, the village situated in deep valley of High Ash Mountains. The Desná then goes southwest through a valley toward the town of Šumperk. After approximately 43.4 km, the Desná flows into the Morava river near Postřelmov village.The mean annual discharge at its mouth", "id": "20977814" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nSerbian forces then headed south into the Morava valley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Muslims fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Turks fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Muslims departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessalonika. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in", "id": "1099566" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n, in the center of the region. Other larger towns include Trebinje, Stolac, Široki Brijeg, Posušje, Ljubuški, Grude, Konjic, and Čapljina. Borders between Herzegovina and Bosnia are unclear and often disputed. The upper flow of the Neretva River lies in northern Herzegovina, a heavily forested area with fast-flowing rivers and high mountains. Konjic and Jablanica lie in this area. The Neretva rises on Lebršnik Mountain, close to the Montenegro border, and as the river flows west, it enters Herzegovina. The entire", "id": "3021137" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nUpper Neretva, of the Neretva river from its source at 1,227 m.a.s.l. and headwaters gorge all the way to the town of Konjic is 90 km, flows from south to north - north-west as most of the Bosnia and Herzegovina rivers belonging to the Danube watershed, and cover some 1,390 km with average elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva briefly expanding into a wide valley which provides fertile agricultural land. There exists a large Jablaničko Lake, artificially formed after construction of dam near Jablanica. \"Second", "id": "16797216" }, { "contents": "Kubršnica\n\n\nThe Kubršnica (Serbian Cyrillic: Кубршница) is a river in Šumadija region of central Serbia, a 42 km-long left and the longest tributary to the Jasenica river. The Kubršnica originates from the Venčac mountain, in the Jasenica sub-region of Šumadija, in the wider area of the town of Aranđelovac. The terrain in the source area of the river is rich in marble and fireclay. The river flows to the east, next to the Aranđelovac's suburb of Banja and turns north near Topola. After the villages", "id": "5629731" }, { "contents": "Peć Bistrica\n\n\nkm-long, Rugovo glacier. The gorge is sparsely inhabited (the village of Mali Štupelj). As it comes out of the gorge, the Peć Bistrica reaches the town of Peć and enters the bottom of the Metohija depression through which it flows for the rest of its course. It runs parallel to the flows of the White Drin to the north and the Dečanska Bistrica to the south, next to the villages of Goraždevac, Lješane, Jablanica, Drenovce and Zaimovo, before it empties into the White Drin south of", "id": "15886949" }, { "contents": "Zlatibor\n\n\nsylvestris\" var. \"zlatiborica\" is a subspecies of pine originating from the mountain, and is endangered today. A hill by the name of Cigla\",\" located near the nearby village of Jablanica, still has some borderline markings of the Kingdom of Serbia, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Zlatibor itself is located in the northern part of the Stari Vlah region, a historical border region between Raška, Herzegovina and Bosnia. It spreads over an area of , in length, southeast to northwest, and up", "id": "3906304" }, { "contents": "Serbian Christmas traditions\n\n\nhousehold. The members of the group were called \"koledari\". The \"koleda\" was carried out from the Feast of Saint Ignatius Theophorus (five days before Christmas) up until the Epiphany. This custom was best preserved in the upper Pčinja District, and in the region around the River South Morava in the Jablanica District, southeastern Serbia. Regarded as pagan and discouraged by the Serbian Orthodox Church, the \"koleda\" ceased to be performed among most of the Serbs during the 19th and 20th centuries. \"Koledari\"", "id": "20573743" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwere designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of Medveđa have small numbers of Albanians and their descendants remained. This was due to a local Ottoman Albanian commander Shahid Pasha from the Jablanica area negotiating on good terms with Prince Milan and thereby guaranteeing their presence. Some other Albanians such as merchants attempted to remain in Niš, but they left after murders occurred and their property was sold off at low values. In 1879, some Albanian refugees from", "id": "1099570" }, { "contents": "Kosovo Pomoravlje\n\n\nThe region's largest cities are Gjilan and Bujanovac. The region is known as \"Kosovsko Pomoravlje\" (Косовско Поморавље, \"Morava Valley of Kosovo\") in Serbian and as Lugina e Anamoraves Binçes (\"Valley of Binač Morava\") in Albanian. Its name is derived from the Binač Morava River, which flows through northern Macedonia, eastern Kosovo and southern Serbia as part of the Great Morava river system. The region includes part of the valley and the Karadak and Koznik mountains. Gjilan has six municipalities and 287 smaller", "id": "13339352" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nAlbanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje, with the intention of then turning west and", "id": "17667142" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\nThe Resavčina (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресавчина) is a river in Serbia, a 32 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. It is sometimes also called \"Resavica\" or \"Resava\" (not to be confused with another Velika Morava's right tributary of Resava or its own tributary of Resavica). The Resavčina originates near the village of Proštinac in Svilajnac municipality. The river originally flows to the north, but soon turns west at the village of Dubnica and enters the western half of the Veliko Pomoravlje region", "id": "4886222" }, { "contents": "Ibar (river)\n\n\nThe Ibar, also known as the Ibër and Ibri (, , ), is a river that flows through eastern Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, with a total length of . The river begins in the Hajla mountain, in Rožaje, eastern Montenegro, and passes through Kosovo to flow into the West Morava river near Kraljevo, central Serbia. It belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area is , with an average discharge of 60 m³/s at the mouth. It is not navigable. The Ibar originates from", "id": "4536148" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Ilirska Bistrica\n\n\nJablanica (; ) is a settlement southeast of Ilirska Bistrica in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. Jablanica is the site of three known mass graves or unmarked graves from the end of the Second World War. They all contain the remains of German soldiers from the 97th Corps that were killed at the beginning of May 1945. The Mountain Fields Mass Grave (), also known as the Mountain Mass Grave (), lies in a meadow about 1.6 km northeast of Jablanica and contains the remains of 10 soldiers. The Solne Mass", "id": "16911511" }, { "contents": "Čezsoča\n\n\nČezsoča (; ) is a settlement in the Municipality of Bovec in the Littoral region of Slovenia. It includes the hamlets of Gorenja Vas (), Dolenja Vas (), Jablanica, Kršovec, and Na Glavi. Čezsoča lies in the valley on the left bank of the Soča River. The terrain then rises up towards Mount Polovnik (1,480 m). East of the settlement is Humčič Hill (810 m), behind which rises Mount Javoršček (1,557 m). Oplenk Creek flows through the village between Gorenja Vas and", "id": "14920585" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nJablanica, the Neretva enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching in depth. Three hydroelectric dams operate between Jablanica and Mostar. When the Neretva expands for the second and final time, it reaches its third section. This area is often colloquially called the \"\"Bosnian and Herzegovinian California\"\". The last of its course forms wide alluvial delta, before the river empties into the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Tatinac (also known as the", "id": "12890344" }, { "contents": "Jablaničko lake\n\n\nJablaničko lake () is a large artificially formed lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva briefly expands into a wide valley. River provided lot of fertile, agricultural land there, before lake flooded most of it. The lake was created in 1953 after construction of Jablanica Dam near Jablanica in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake has an irregular elongated shape. Its width varies along its length. The lake is a popular vacation destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Swimming, boating and especially fishing are popular activities", "id": "13828307" }, { "contents": "Jablanica Dam\n\n\nThe Jablanica Dam is an arch-gravity dam on the Neretva River about northeast of Jablanica in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The dam was constructed between 1947 and 1955 with the primary purpose of hydroelectric power production. The power station was commissioned in two stages, from 1955 until 1958. The first generator was commissioned in February 1955. An upgrade in 2008 increased the installed capacity of the power station from 150 MW to 180 MW. The dam's power station is located about to the southeast near Jablanica", "id": "854706" }, { "contents": "Jablanik\n\n\nJablanik (Serbian Cyrillic: Јабланик) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Valjevo. Its highest peak \"Jablanik\" has an elevation of 1,275 meters(10001020_ above sea level. Jablanik is located at the source of the river Jablanica. It is separated from nearby Medvednik mountain by high pass Stolica, while the Debelo Brdo saddle separates it from Povlen in the southeast. The highest peak has the same name as the mountain itself - Jablanik, and is 1,275 m high. The hills around the peak are mainly", "id": "366162" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\nThe Nišava or Nishava (Bulgarian and , ) is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia, a right tributary, and with a length of 218 km also the longest one, of the South Morava. The Nišava originates in western Bulgaria, in the Stara Planina mountains (east of Kom Peak) near the village of Gintsi. Its source is close to the Serbian border. It enters Serbia after 67 km of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries. Because it flows through Gintsi, the upper course of the river is", "id": "9627075" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nAfter Mramorac village, the Jasenica spills over in several parallel flows, which continue until its confluence. After the Pridvorica and Vodice villages (on different arms of the river), the Jasenica reaches the town of Smederevska Palanka, the most populous settlement in its valley. This is also where the Kubršnica, its main tributary, flows into it from the left. The Jasenica then gently bends to the east, flowing into the Great Morava near the village of Veliko Orašje (the southern arm of the river flows through the town", "id": "3481502" }, { "contents": "Gruža (river)\n\n\nThe Gruža (Serbian Cyrillic: Гружа, ) is a river in central Serbia. The river is a 62 km long left tributary to the Zapadna Morava. The Gruža originates in the central part of the Rudnik mountain, right under the mountain's main settlement, the village of Rudnik, northeast of the town of Gornji Milanovac, central Serbia. The river flows south next to the village of Majdan, around the Rudnik mountain into the Takovo region and at the village of Nevade, just few kilometers away from Gornji Milanovac,", "id": "10971320" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\n(hamlet Panjak) on the Serbian-Bosnian border Crni Rzav meets the Jablanica river at the village Gornje Vardište and finally the river Beli Rzav at the village of Donje Vardište. The Rzav continues as the natural extension of the Beli Rzav, but since the Black Rzav is longer, the latter is considered to be the main headstream. It floes between the southernmost part of the Zvijezda mountain (\"Ponos\" peak) from the north and the Suha Gora mountain from the south, next to the villages of Prosjek (and", "id": "11540155" }, { "contents": "Ub (river)\n\n\nThe Ub (Serbian Cyrillic: Уб) is a river in western Serbia, a 57 km-long right and longest tributary to Tamnava river. The Ub originates from the Vlašić mountain in Podgorina region of west Serbia, near the village of Kasapo. From its source to the mouth, the river flows to the east, parallel to the river Tamnava, which it will eventually join. The villages located in the upper section of the river's flow are Družetić, Pambukovica and Čučuge, where the Ub slightly turns to the", "id": "2261401" }, { "contents": "Olomouc Region\n\n\nof the region is situated on the water level of the Morava River near to Kojetín in the Přerov District (190 m above sea level). The Morava river flows through the region and the majority of the region's territory belongs to Morava’s drainage basin. A small northern part of the region belongs to the drainage basin of Odra River, which flows to the Baltic Sea. The Olomouc Region offers a great variety of natural points of interest. Protected landscape area of the Jeseníky mountains offers a number of scenic places such", "id": "11419394" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina\n\n\nJablanica is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is situated on the Neretva river and Jablanica lake. The municipality of Jablanica is a major tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The municipality offer a wide variety of activities. The surrounding mountains such as Plasa, Čvrsnica and Prenj offer both hunting grounds and a variety of hiking trails. One popular hiking destination is \"Hajdučka Vrata\", a natural wonder, the product of wind", "id": "9009264" }, { "contents": "Krupá (Morava)\n\n\nKrupá (German: Graupa Bach) is a creek in Šumperk District, Moravia, left tributary of the Morava. Its length is 19,2 km and its drainage basin covers 112.7 km2. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 4.48 m³/s. The Krupá originates in Czech part of the Śnieżnik Mountains, 400 meters above sea level. The Krupá then goes south toward the town of Staré Město. It flows into the Morava river near Hanušovice town. River keeps its natural character with meanders and original riversides. A river bottom is", "id": "1745557" }, { "contents": "Oskava (river)\n\n\nOskava is a river in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic, left tributary of the Morava river. Its length is 50.3 km and its drainage basin covers 569 km. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 3.53 m/s. The Oskava originates from southeast slope of Kamenná hora in Hrubý Jeseník, 215 meters above sea level. The river is surrounded by woods in upper reaches, flows through hills of Nízký Jeseník in middle reaches and its lower reaches is situated in swampy floodplain of Litovelské Pomoraví Protected Landscape Area.", "id": "8538845" }, { "contents": "Crna Trava\n\n\nCrna Trava ( ) is a village and municipality located in the Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to 2011 census, the population of the village is 434 inhabitants, while population of the municipality is 1,663. This is the smallest by population and poorest municipality in Serbia. Crna Trava is famous for its migrant builders, who are considered the best in the region and are colloquially described as \"building half of Yugoslavia\". The name of the village in Serbian translates to \"Black Grass\". The origin of the name", "id": "18032485" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\n. At the village of Kušiljevo, the river receives the small stream of \"Beljeva\" from the left and turns northward, which is the general direction of its course for the rest of the flow. The river flows parallel to the Velika Morava river as its satellite flow, in the Morava's floodplain, so there are no settlements on the Resavica itself, but several large villages are located in its valley (Porodin, Žabari, Simićevo, Aleksandrovac Požarevački, Vlaški Do, Poljana), all of them located on the", "id": "4886223" }, { "contents": "Lugomir\n\n\nThe Lugomir (Serbian Cyrillic: Лугомир) is a river in central Serbia, a 57 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. The Lugomir originates from two headstreams, the Dulenska reka and the Županjevačka reka. The shorter headstream of Županjevačka reka (Cyrillic: \"Жупањевачка река\") originates from the mountain of Gledićke planine in southern Šumadija region of central Serbia. Its spring is just some 500 m away from the source of Lugomir's another headstream, the Dulenska reka. The river first flows to the east", "id": "5130918" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\ncities in Serbia, 10 km after which the Nišava empties into the Južna Morava. However, with the rapid growth of Niš in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs, the banks of the Nišava are urbanized almost to its mouth. After being divided into districts in 1992, the Nišava District (with Niš as administrative center) is named after the river. The river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area covers 4,086 km, of which about 73% in Serbia, the rest in Bulgaria", "id": "9627077" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nsection\" begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama river between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes a southern course and enter a largest canyons of its course, running through steep slopes of magnificent mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching 800–1200 meters in depth. From here Neretva flows toward the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Jezernica (also Tatinac), the Gornji and Donji Krupac, the Ljuta-Dindolka, the Jesenica, the Bjelimićka Rijeka, the Slatinica, the Račica, the Rakitnica, the Konjička", "id": "16797217" }, { "contents": "Resava (river)\n\n\nThe Resava (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресава) is a river in central Serbia, a 65 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava. It also gives the name to the surrounding Resava region, the Resava Monastery, the coal mines in its valley and a popular tourist destination of Resava Cave. The Resava originates from the Homolje region in eastern Serbia. It springs out at an altitude of 1,100 m and flows westward between the mountains of Beljanica (on the north) and Kučaj (on the south). In its", "id": "15040274" }, { "contents": "A1 motorway (Serbia)\n\n\nJužna Morava river. Southern section (Niš–Leskovac–Vranje–Macedonian border) consists of 128 km that are in service, while additional 26 km are under construction. Construction of southern section has been completed by May 2019, and last sections opened for traffic on 18 May 2019: Highway passes through valley of South Morava, passes west of Niš, by Merošina and Leskovac, and after Grdelica built highway ends. 26 kilometers of highway under construction passes through Grdelica gorge, very difficult terrain. This sections is often considered", "id": "1785427" }, { "contents": "Čivelj\n\n\nČivelj is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in the municipality of Jablanica, Herzegovina-Neretva Canton, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1991, the village had six inhabitants, all of whom were Muslims. In 2013, Čivelj had 10 inhabitants. Tourism is solid. Civelj is placed 8 kilometres from Jablanica and it is placed on Jablanica lake. In lake there are 5 types of fishes including the most popular \"pastrmka\". The village was found in 1911. by local fishermen. Near Civelj", "id": "4645021" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nAlthough these streams are of low outflow, there are also numerous wellsprings rising on both sides of the canyon at the river banks, with high-capacity discharge. Three large hydroelectric power stations operate in this section of the Neretva, between Jablanica and Mostar, namely Grabovica HPP, Salakovac HPP and Mostar HPP. Jablanica lake is a large artificial lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva expands into a wide valley. The river provided fertile, agricultural land before the lake flooded most of it. The lake", "id": "12890353" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nThe Jasenica (Serbian Cyrillic: Јасеница, ) is a river in central Serbia. It is long and is the left tributary of the Great Morava. This river gives the name to the surrounding region. The Jasenica originates from several streams, most notably the Đurinci (Cyrillic: Ђуринци) from Venčac mountain, and the Srebrenica (Cyrillic: Сребреница) from the northern slopes of the Rudnik mountain in central Serbia. At its origin, the river runs through the eastern border of the Kačer region. It flows to the southeast", "id": "3481500" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nin north Skopje, Macedonia. The streams Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is, after passing the Macedonian-Serbian border, known as the Binačka Morava. After 49 km it meets the Preševska Moravica at Bujanovac, and for the remainder, 246 km, flows as the South Morava. The South Morava belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and its own drainage area is 15,696 km², of which 1,237 km² is in Bulgaria (through its right tributary Nišava). Its average", "id": "15699472" }, { "contents": "Pešter\n\n\nRivers Uvac, Vapa, Jablanica and Grabovica flow through the plateau. In the geologic past, the field was a large lake, of which only a small Sjenica lake near the village of Tuzinje remained. The soil is mostly karst interspersed with pastures. Economy of the area relies primarily on cattle breeding, chiefly sheep. Pešter is famous for its dairy products, especially the \"Sjenica cheese\" (\"Sjenički sir\"), as well as lamb and prosciutto. The plateau is sparsely populated: most settlements are on the", "id": "16748290" }, { "contents": "Sredačka župa\n\n\nSredačka Župa (; \"county of Sredska\") is a remote geographical region, a valley, in southeastern Kosovo, below the Šar Mountains at the source of the Prizrenska Bistrica. The region, an oval basin, lies below the Šar Mountains, at the source, upper stream of the Prizrenska Bistrica (\"Prizren river\"). South of the region between the Prizren mountains and Koritnik mountain, lies the Gora region. It currently includes Sredska, Pousko, Jablanica, Lokvica, Rečane, Živinjane, Planjane, Nebregošte,", "id": "13372292" }, { "contents": "Binačka Morava\n\n\nBinačka Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Биначка Морава; ) or (\"Mirusha\") is a river which flows in southeastern Kosovo and North Macedonia. It flows generally in the southwest to northeast direction, from Macedonian border to Bujanovac, where, after 49 km, meets Preševska Moravica, to create South Morava. The river begins in the mountain of Skopska Crna Gora, in North Macedonia, north of its capital Skopje. Streams of Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is,", "id": "12867615" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwar, the Albanian population depending on the area reacted differently to incoming Serbian forces by either offering resistance or fleeing toward nearby mountains and Ottoman Kosovo. Although most of these Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces, a small presence was allowed to remain in the Jablanica valley where their descendants live today. Serbs from Lab moved to Serbia during and after the first round of hostilities in 1876, while incoming Albanian refugees thereafter 1878 repopulated their villages. Albanian refugees also settled alongside the north-eastern Ottoman-Serbian border, in urban areas", "id": "1099553" }, { "contents": "Banjska River\n\n\nThe Banjska River ( / \"Banjska reka\", \"Baths River\"), is a river in southern Serbia, the right tributary of Toplica in which it flows near Kuršumlija. It rises under the far south-eastern branch of Kopaonik. It is 22 km long, with a river basin area of 155 km². The average flow at the mouth is 0,7 m³/s. The valley of the river is mostly ravines, while the basin is rich in forest. The Kuršumlija-Kuršumlijska Banja-Prepolac Pass-Podujevo-", "id": "14979528" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nby a catastrophic flood. Then unregulated river Jablanica, swollen after a long rainy period, broke on June 6, spilled out of its banks and caused enormous material damage Lebane. Flood toll was paid and human victims (killed two people). After this tragic event, with financial help, Lebane begins to industrialize faster, and the process of industrialization has caused more versatile and faster development of the city. According to the 2011 census, the municipality has 22,000 inhabitants. The ethnic composition of the municipality: The following table", "id": "17523935" }, { "contents": "Čvrsnica\n\n\nČvrsnica () is a mountain in the Dinarides of Bosnia and Herzegovina, located in northern Herzegovina, most of the mountain is located in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton municipalities of Mostar and Jablanica while the smaller part of the mountain, around 10% is located in the municipality of Posušje. The highest peak (Pločno) is 2228 metres. Čvrsnica is surrounded by the river Neretva from the east (20 km), its tributaries Doljanka (18 km) from the north and Drežanka (19.8 km) from the south,", "id": "6129606" }, { "contents": "Myjava (river)\n\n\nThe Myjava River is a river in western Slovakia and for a small part in the Czech Republic and left tributary of the Morava River. It rises in the White Carpathians near the village of Nová Lhota in Moravia, but crosses the Czech-Slovak border shortly afterwards and flows in a southern direction until the town of Myjava, where it enters the Myjava Hills and turns west. Near Sobotište it flows into the Záhorie Lowland and turns south until the village of Jablonica, turning northwest and from Senica it flows west, passing through", "id": "2099838" }, { "contents": "West Morava\n\n\nSouth and Great Morava's meridian (south-to-north) flow, the West Morava runs in an opposed, latitudinal (west-to-east) direction, dividing the region of Šumadija of the central Serbia from the southern parts of the country. Due to the West Morava's direction, it flows between many mountains, regions and sub-regions: The West Morava river valley, Zapadno Pomoravlje, is economically the most developed of all three Morava river valleys. With the valley of the Ibar, the West", "id": "7786624" }, { "contents": "Ralja (river)\n\n\nThe Ralja () is a river in Šumadija region of Serbia, a 51 km long left tributary to the Jezava, a tributary of the Great Morava river. It also gives its name to the surrounding Šumadija's subregion of Ralja. The Ralja originates from the northern part of the Kosmaj mountain, north of the village of Velika Ivanča, in the Sopot municipality of the City of Belgrade. Almost from the source, the river valley is a route for the Belgrade-Niš railway. At the villages of Popović and Mali", "id": "2491229" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nBovan gorge carved by the river and is very popular local and regional tourist destination, especially among campers and fishermen, but the coastline is not put in order. The river continues to the south, in an inverse flow, and after the villages of Subotinac and Kraljevo, it empties into the Južna Morava at the town of Aleksinac. The lower section used to be a coal mining area too, just like the upper one, but the mines (Aleksinački Rudnik) are closed now. The Sokobanjska Moravica brlongs to the Black", "id": "1726358" }, { "contents": "Golijska Moravica\n\n\nThe Golijska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Голијска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in western Serbia. With a length of 98 km, it is the longer headstream of the Zapadna Morava (it forms it with the Đetinja), and thus, of the Velika Morava. Its name, Moravica, means \"little Morava\" in Serbian, and it also gives its name to the surrounding region and the modern Moravica District of Serbia. The Golijska Moravica originates from the western slopes of the Golija mountain and flows", "id": "5380325" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\n. The Nišava is not navigable. It is not only the longest tributary of the Južna Morava, but also the largest one in terms of discharge (36 km/s). It has many smaller tributaries, the most important being the Temštica from the right, and the Jerma (or Sukovska reka), Crvena reka, Koritnička reka and Kutinska reka from the left. The Nišava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia: the route follows the valleys of the Morava", "id": "9627078" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nThe Toplica (Serbian Cyrillic: Топлица, ) is a river in southern Serbia. The river is 130 km long and gives its name to the region it flows through, which constitutes most of the modern Toplica District of Serbia. The Toplica originates under the name of \"Duboka\" from the eastern slopes of the Kopaonik mountain, just south of the highest peak, Pančićev vrh. It flows to the southeast, on the western slopes of the Lepa Gora mountain, next to the villages of Merćez, Selova, Žuč,", "id": "19530451" }, { "contents": "Great Morava\n\n\nof the Velika Morava's right tributary Resava). The average discharge of the Velika Morava on its confluence with Danube is 255 m³/s (120 m³/s brought by Zapadna Morava, 100 m³/s by Južna Morava, and 35 m³/s amounted by the Velika Morava itself). Tributaries of the Velika Morava are short, the longest one being the Jasenica (79 km) and others rarely exceeding 50 km. Right tributaries are: Jovanovačka reka, Crnica, Ravanica, Resava and Resavica (or Resavčina). Left tributaries are more numerous,", "id": "2295702" }, { "contents": "Vevčani\n\n\nVevčani () is a village in the Republic of North Macedonia. It is the only settlement and seat of Vevčani Municipality. The village of Vevčani is found in the southwestern range at the foot of the Jablanica mountain range. It is situated from 800 – 950 metres above sea level. The village is located 14 km North-West of the town of Struga. The village is situated near the villages of Oktisi, Velešta, Podgorci, Gorna Belica with the Albanian border to the West of the village. The famous Vevčani", "id": "5042995" } ]
The Jablanica ( Serbian : Јабланица , ) is an river in southern Serbia . A left tributary of the South ( or Južna ) Morava river , it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia 's Jablanica District , with the region contributing about one third of the district 's area . The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain , near the village of Grbavce , on the administrative border of the Kosovo province . The area is rich in thermal springs , so several spas are located near the river : Stara Banja , Ravna Banja and Sijarina with popular Sijarinska Banja . At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary Čokotinska reka ( Cyrillic : Чокотинска река ) , turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point . The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the and Radan mountains , in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the in Kosovo . The river flows eastward , passing regional center of [START_ENT] Medveđa [END_ENT] and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo , before reaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac , part of the depression of Leskovac , which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava . In the region , near Lebane , a famed archeological find of ( Iustiniana Prima ) is located . The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo , Vranovce , Bošnjace , Turekovac and Stopanje , reaches Vinarce , the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac , and turns north . First it flows parallel to the Veternica river , to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje , then parallel to the Južna Morava . After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava . From Pečenjevce , a parallel flow ( canal ) begins , connecting the Jablanica and s , some 15 km to the north . Through Južna Morava , the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin , draining an area of 895 km ² itself . It 's not navigable and has an average discharge of 6 m ³ / s , which in rainy years grows much higher , so the river floods its valley causing lots of material damage . The name of the river , Jablanica , in Serbian means the
c8407ff5-0d6d-4137-a093-b889612092aa_river:10
[{"answer": "Medve\u0111a", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "3557885", "title": "Medve\u0111a"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nreaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac, part of the depression of Leskovac, which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. In the region, near Lebane, a famed archeological find of Caričin grad (\"Iustiniana Prima\") is located. The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo, Vranovce, Bošnjace, Turekovac and Stopanje, reaches Vinarce, the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac", "id": "3481303" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\n, and turns north. First it flows parallel to the Veternica river, to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje, then parallel to the Južna Morava. After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava. From Pečenjevce, a parallel flow (canal) begins, connecting the Jablanica and Toplica rivers, some 15 km to the north. Through Južna Morava, the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, draining an area of itself. It's not navigable", "id": "3481304" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\npopular Sijarinska Banja. At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary \"Čokotinska reka\" (Cyrillic: \"Чокотинска река\"), turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point. The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the Majdan and Radan mountains, in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the District of Priština in Kosovo. The river flows eastward, passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo, before", "id": "3481302" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nThe Jablanica (, ) is an river in southern Serbia. A left tributary of the South (or Južna) Morava river, it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia's Jablanica District, with the region contributing about one third of the district's area. The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain, near the village of Grbavce, on the border with Kosovo. The area is rich in thermal springs, so several spas are located near the river: Stara Banja, Ravna Banja and Sijarina with", "id": "3481301" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nJablanica with third parallel flow, the \"Sušica\", being formed in between. Settlements include many small villages, like Vina, Bukova Gora, Miroševce, Žabljane, Beli Potok and Strojkovce. In the Leskovac field, the river gently turns north, receives the Sušica from the left and reaches the town of Leskovac. The Veternica continues northward, being connected to the Jablanica river by the canal at the village of Bogojevce, before it empties into the Južna Morava. The Veternica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its", "id": "11539775" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nThe Veternica (Serbian Cyrillic: Ветерница, ) is a river in southern Serbia, a 75 km long left tributary to the Južna Morava, which gives the name to the region surrounding its valley. The Veternica originates from the Grot peak, the southernmost part of the Kukavica mountain. Four smaller streams meet at the village of Vlase and continue to the north as the Veternica. The river flows next to the villages of Golemo Selo, Oštra Glava and Gagince, where it flows parallel to the Jablanica river. As the Veternica", "id": "11539773" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nbends to the northeast, it enters the low Veternica region, part of the Leskovac field in the composite valley of the Južna Morava. Small region, located between the Kukavica mountain on the south and the Jablanica region on the north, is divided in two micro-regions, upper one being centered on the small town of Vučje (which is not located on the river itself) while the center of the lower micro-region is the town of Leskovac. As it enters the region, the Veternica furthers away from the", "id": "11539774" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nthe west, Kukavica and Čemernik in the south and Babička Gora, Seličevica and Suva Planina to the east. The largest river in the region of Leskovac is the South Morava River, which flows south to north. Tributaries of the South Morava are: the Vlasina river, which collects water from Lake Vlasina and flows through Crna Trava and Vlasotince; the Veternica river, which flows through Leskovac; the Jablanica river, which springs from the foot of Goljak and flows through Medveđa and Lebane; the Pusta (Deserted) river,", "id": "2857704" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nof 590 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and is not navigable. The region of Pusta Reka mostly correspondence with the river's watershed. It is located between the Pasjača mountain and lower Toplica region (on the north), the Southern Pomoravlje (Field of Leskovac, on the east), the Jablanica region (on the south) and the Radan mountain (on the west). The region is an agricultural area, almost without any industry, except for some smaller facilities in regional center, Bojnik", "id": "12523581" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nof Podina, Voljčince, Badnjevac and the smaller regional center Žitorađa. After the Toplica reaches municipal center of Doljevac, it enters the most densely populated part of the south Pomoravlje, turns north and flows into the Južna Morava at the village of Orljane, across the medieval ruins of Kurvin grad, as Južna Morava's longest left tributary. The Toplica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its own drainage area of 2,217 km². The river is not navigable. The river valley is a major traffic route in southern Serbia as", "id": "19530454" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nThe Sokobanjska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Сокобањска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in central eastern Serbia, a 58 km-long right tributary to the Južna Morava river. The Sokobanjska Moravica originates from the eastern slopes of the Devica mountain, near the village of Skrobnica. The river flows to the north, turns westward at the village of Levovik and enters the Banja region. The rivers flows between the northern slopes of the Devica and Ozren mountains (on the south) and southern slopes of the Rtanj mountain", "id": "1726356" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\nmouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. As the wider Jabllanica region, Medveđa also had an Albanian majority. These Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces in a way that today would be characterized as ethnic cleansing. Due to depopulation and economic considerations some small numbers of Albanians were allowed to stay and return though not to their previous settlements and instead were designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of", "id": "7117787" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\n, a notable Muslim population existed in the districts of Niš, Pirot, Vranje, Leskovac, Prokuplje and Kuršumlija. The rural parts of Toplica, Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the", "id": "1099558" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nthe southernmost slopes of the Suva Planina and Babička Gora mountains, it reaches the town of Vlasotince and western parts of the low Leskovac field, part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. After the villages of Batulovce and Stajkovce, the Vlasina empties into the Južna Morava, east of the Leskovac's eastern suburb of Mrštane. The Vlasina drains an area of 991 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin and it is not navigable. On 26 June 1988, after a period of heavy rains, Vlasina was a", "id": "14981332" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nThe Pusta River ( / \"Pusta reka\", \"Desolate River\") is a river in southern Serbia, a 71-km long left tributary to the South Morava. It also gives the name to the Pusta Reka region in its valley. The river originates northeast of Prolom Banja, near the Sokolovica village, on the northern tip of the Radan mountain, as the \"Golema River\" (\"Big River\"). It flows eastward, between the mountains of Radan (to the south) and Pasjača (to the", "id": "12523579" }, { "contents": "Persecution of Muslims during Ottoman contraction\n\n\nReka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the Turks were of Albanian origin. The Muslims in the cities of Niš and Pirot were Turkish-speaking; Vranje and Leskovac were Turkish- and Albanian-speaking; Prokuplje", "id": "8891598" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nvalley between Konjic and Jablanica, known simply as \"Neretva\" since Middle Ages, the new point for hydrographical division became dam of the Jablanica HPP where also is a place of confluence of the rivers Neretva and Rama. Here the Neretva river suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before it reach town of Jablanica. From this point it turns again toward south and enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes of the mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica", "id": "12890350" }, { "contents": "Rama (Neretva)\n\n\nRama is a river in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a major tributary of the Neretva. It joins it from the right by discharging into Neretva's artificial reservoir, Jablaničko lake, at place called Marina Pećina, near village of Gračac, between location of underground powerhouse of Rama Hydroelectric Power Station and Jablanica Dam, depending on water level in Jablaničko lake, some 15 kilometers upstream from Jablanica. The Rama flows through municipalities of Prozor-Rama and Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, while its headwaters together with wellsprings in the region of", "id": "3052779" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\nThe Kolubara (Serbian Cyrillic: Колубара, ), is a long river in western Serbia; it is an eastern, right tributary to the Sava river. Kolubara is formed by the two small rivers Obnica and Jablanica. \"Obnica\" is the river in Western Serbia that springs at the foot of the mountain Medvednik. It flows to the East, through the villages of Suvodanje, Bobova, Majinović, Pričević and Zlatarić, and at the city of Valjevo meets the river \"Jablanica\" and forms Kolubara. The Obnica is", "id": "20109582" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\ndating to the 4th century AD lay at various locations of the town, as it was a transitory zone of Upper Moesia; travel and postal stations are among the finds. Toponyms such as \"Arbanaška\" and \"Đjake\" shows an Albanian presence in the Toplica and Southern Morava regions (located north-east of contemporary Kosovo) before the expulsion of Albanians during 1877–1878 period. The rural parts of Jablanica valley and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river", "id": "7117786" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\naverage elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva again expands into a third and largest valley which provided fertile agricultural land before it was flooded by large artificial reservoir, Jablaničko Lake, formed after construction of a Jablanica Dam near town of Jablanica. The second section begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before reaches town of Jablanica, from which point turns again toward south. From", "id": "12890343" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nLebane () is a town and municipality located in Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 10,062 inhabitants, while the municipality has 20,000 inhabitants. The town is located at the confluence of the rivers Jablanica and Šumanska Reka, in the alluvial plain created by the former. Just northeast of the town a larger plain called Leskovačko polje extends toward the town of Leskovac, which is the district seat. The elevation of the town of Lebane is between 275.2 and 420 MASL.", "id": "17523929" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nRakic writes about it as a \"\"big village populated by Serbs, in a valley, on the river Jablanica, on its left bank.\"\" Only when Lebane got the role of Jablanica district headquarters, it began to gradually develop in a direction of a small town. The core of this small town was a series of houses along the Jablanica which is 45m wide here (as is even now); at the end of this series are the buildings of the Court and Municipality. The main feature of", "id": "17523931" }, { "contents": "Štulac (Lebane)\n\n\nthe village of Prekopčelica. The village is located on the valley slopes of the Caričin Potok creek. It is scattered between the altitudes of . It is situated in the wider Pusta Reka region. The village rests on the western slopes of the , which here divides the regions of Pusta Reka and Jablanica. On the west, the easternmost slopes of the Radan mountain begin. The village area covers . The Slavs settled in the area in the 7th century, centering around the ruins of Iustiniana Prima. Due to the lack of", "id": "11151840" }, { "contents": "Grdelica\n\n\nGrdelica () is a town in southern Serbia. It is situated in the Leskovac municipality, in the Jablanica District. The total population of the town was 3,194 people as of the 2011 census. For census purposes, Grdelica is divided into two adjacent parts, southern \"Grdelica town\" (\"Grdelica varoš\"; population 2,136) and northern \"Grdelica village\" (\"Grdelica selo\"; 1,058). Grdelica lies at the South Morava river, on the mountainous terrain at the entrance of the Grdelica Gorge. It", "id": "460756" }, { "contents": "Gornji Bučumet\n\n\nall settlements registered separately in the census. The three settlements lie in the South Morava basin, above the Jablanica river, and as such are located in the Upper Jablanica region. The highest mountain in Upper Bučumet is Paramid (853), with the mountain of Sv. Petar (1149) being located in Middle Bučumet. The three neighbourhoods of Bučumet are 470 to 853 metres above sea level. There is a medieval church built on the ruins of an older church. During the Toplica-Jablanica Operation (, ) in", "id": "12752738" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nthe huge floods of its daughter river. The South Morava has 157 tributaries. The most important left tributaries are: Jablanica, Veternica, Pusta reka and Toplica. Right tributaries are: Vrla, Vlasina, Nišava (the longest) and Sokobanjska Moravica. The South Morava has a significant potential for electricity production, and a huge hydroelectrical system (Vlasina- Vrla I-IV power stations) has been constructed in its drainage basin. To a certain extent, its waters are used for irrigation. The river valley's most important role", "id": "15699476" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nThe Rasina () is a river in south central Serbia. The long river flows through the Rasina region, gives its name to the modern Rasina District of Serbia, and flows into the Zapadna Morava near the city of Kruševac. Its historical name is Arsen (Αρσεγα). The Rasina springs from the southern slopes of the Goč mountain, near the village of Rašovka, southwest of the most famous Serbian spa, Vrnjačka Banja. The river originally flows to the southeast, around the mountains of Željin and Kopaonik, next to", "id": "209716" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nLeskovac (Serbian Cyrillic: Лесковац, ) is a city and the administrative center of the Jablanica District in southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the city urban area has 60,288 inhabitants, while the city administrative area has 144,206. Traces of life of the Brnjica culture (8th century BC) is seen at the Hisar Hill (Hisar Leskovac) that was protected by a deep moat with a palisade on its inner side, a fortification similar to that of another fortification on the site near Zlokućane in the Velika Morava basin", "id": "2857693" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nThe favorable location and the richness of nature made Jablanica valley important place since the earliest times. Traffic affordable and fertile, Leskovac valley has provided favorable conditions for the settlement of population. Archaeological findings, of which the most important are Hissar and Caričin grad (Iustiniana Prima) show that life in this area, continuously evolved from prehistoric man to date. First mention of Lebane as Hlebane dates back to 1512. Lebane is formed as a village of the same name after the liberation in 1878. Visiting Serbia in 1880s, M.", "id": "17523930" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nThe South Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Јужна Морава, Serbian Latin: \"Južna Morava\", ; ) is a river in eastern Kosovo and in southern Serbia, which represents the shorter headwater of Great Morava. Today, it is 295 km long, including its source river Binačka Morava. It flows generally in the south to north direction, from Macedonian border to Kosovo and onwards to Central Serbia, where it meets West Morava at Stalać, to create Great Morava. The river rises in the Skopska Crna Gora mountain", "id": "15699471" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\nis the Rzav's longer headstream. It originates from the Čigota mountain, eastern section of the Zlatibor mountain. The river originally flows northward, next to the villages of Vodice and Jokina Ćuprija, reaches the central section of the Zlatibor where it is dammed and creates the artificial Ribnica lake (surface area of 10 km²), after the nearby village of Ribnica. After the lake, the river sharply turns west and soon gets followed by the parallel stream of the \"Jablanica\" river. After crossing the village of Mokra Gora", "id": "11540154" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\n25 km long. Jablanica originates on the eastern slopes of the Jablanik mountain, just few kilometers away from Obnica. It curves around Parač mountain and next to the village of Balinović, before it meets Obnica in Valjevo. Jablanica is 21.5 km long. This is also the beginning of the long region of the Kolubara valley, divided in two large parts, referred to as Upper (\"gornja\") Kolubara and Lower (\"donja\") Kolubara (around the Belgrade's suburb of Obrenovac). At Valjevo, the", "id": "20109583" }, { "contents": "Jablanica District\n\n\nThe Jablanica District (, ) is one of nine administrative districts of Southern and Eastern Serbia. It expands in the south-eastern parts of Serbia. According to the 2011 census results, it has a population of 215,463 inhabitants. The administrative center of the district is the city of Leskovac. The district encompasses the municipalities of: According to the 2011 census results, the Jablanica Distract has a total population of 216,304 inhabitants. Ethnic composition of the Jablanica District: Famous cultural-historic monuments in this District are: the Roman", "id": "13223854" }, { "contents": "Kalna, Crna Trava\n\n\nKalna () is a small village in the Crna Trava municipality of the Jablanica District of Serbia. Kalna village is an old Serbian village, 35 km away from the Crna Trava. It is located between Tumba and Serbian-Bulgarian border, at an altitude of 500 to 1100 m. The total area is rural area of 7285 hectares. The Kalna can be reached from three directions: The road in this way was there since the Turkish rule. It was the shortest connection of Leskovac valley (Dubočica) to Sofia and Constantinople", "id": "11211518" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina-Neretva Canton\n\n\ntook place there during World War II and there is a large museum in Jablanica dedicated to these battles. The Neretva river runs through the cities of Konjic, Jablanica, Mostar and Čapljina before it flows through Croatia and into the Adriatic Sea. There are large lakes in the canton such as the Jablanica lake located around the city Jablanica. The southern most municipality in the canton is the Neum municipality which borders the Adriatic sea and the eastern most municipality is the Ravno municipality along the border with Croatia. Of the ten cantons comprising", "id": "3225485" }, { "contents": "Vardar Corps\n\n\nThe Vardar Corps was a corps of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland (JVuO) that operated on the left bank of the river Vardar during the World War II in Yugoslavia on the territory of modern-day North Macedonia and southern Serbia. Its commander was former Captain of the Royal Guard of the Royal Yugoslav Army Stojan Krstić. It consisted of four brigades with total number of 1,000 soldiers. Together with Jablanica Corps, South Morava Corps and Flying Corps it belonged under \"Mountain Staff 110\" () located in Sijarinska Banja", "id": "11325997" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nthe villages of Mitrovo Polje, Bzenica, Pleš, Jablanica, Grčak, Toskići, Budilovina and Milentija. When the Rasina reaches the small town of Brus, it enters the upper Rasina region and continues next to the villages of Tršanovci, Lepenac and Razbojna. At this point the river reaches the western side of the Veliki Jastrebac mountain, and makes a wide, elbow turn to the north. In this part of the course, the Rasina also makes a southeast border of the Aleksandrovačka Župa region. After the villages of Bogiše", "id": "209717" }, { "contents": "Doljanka\n\n\nDoljanka is a right tributary of Neretva river in North Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The length of Doljanka is around 18 km and reaches an altitude drop of about 400 m. Arises from sources scattered type under the far northeast slopes of Vran mountain on altitude of 1324 m. It runs through limestone canyon, which is high up to 1,200 m and flows through the village of Doljani. Doljanka flows into the Neretva River between Jablanica and Mostar, at an altitude of 300 m. It is also the connection over which trouts from the Neretva", "id": "8874715" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nValley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Albanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje", "id": "17667163" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n. The Neretva then flows northwest, through Konjic. It enters the Jablanica Reservoir (\"Jablaničko jezero\"), one of the largest in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake ends near the town of Jablanica. From here on, the Neretva turns southward, continuing to the Adriatic Sea. With the mountains lining its shores gradually receding, the Neretva enters a valley where the city of Mostar lies. It flows under the old bridge (\"Stari most\") and continues, now wider, toward the town of Čapljina and", "id": "3021139" }, { "contents": "Radan (mountain)\n\n\nRadan (Serbian Cyrillic: Радан) is a mountain in southern Serbia, near the town of Kuršumlija. Its highest peak, Šopot, has an elevation of 1,408 meters above sea level. Radan separates the valleys of the Toplica and Jablanica rivers. It is well covered with deciduous and evergreen forests. The best known spot on Radan is the Devil's Town – a peculiar rock formation consisting of hundreds of mushroom-like posts, located on its southern slopes. Near the Devil's Town there are ruins of Ivanova kula –", "id": "3957176" }, { "contents": "Crni Timok\n\n\nкотлина, \"depression of Crna Reka\"), populated with many smaller villages (Lukovo, Jablanica, Valakonje, Savinac, Gamzigrad, Zvezdan). At Gamzigrad there is also an important archeological site from Roman times. After a flow of 84 km, the Crni Timok reaches Zaječar, where it joins the Beli Timok River, forming the Veliki Timok River. It drains an area of . Early in its course it receives from the right the Radovanska, Suva, Velika, Salešča, Šarbanovačka, Jasenova, Bajnska and Suva", "id": "11459489" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (mountain range)\n\n\nJablanica ( ; ) is a mountain range in Southern and Southeastern Europe, stretching north-south direction across the border of Albania and the Republic of North Macedonia. The long mountain ridge is higher than for approximately , while the highest part, located in its very center, is Black Stone at high. Both countries have 50% of the mountain, Albania the west and North Macedonia the east. Jablanica Mountain contains many large mountain lakes. Shebenik mountain is located just to the west of Jablanica and give name to the Shebenik", "id": "3232652" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nThe Vlasina (Serbian Cyrillic: Власина), is a river in southeastern Serbia, a 70 km-long outflow of the Vlasina Lake and a right tributary to the Južna Morava, which also gives its name to the surrounding Vlasina region. The Vlasina flows out from the Vlasina Lake at an altitude of 1,213 m. Lake used to be a large, muddy peat bog, but in 1947-51 the Vlasina was dammed by the long, earth dam and the bog was turned into an artificial lake. The river flows to", "id": "14981330" }, { "contents": "Desná (Morava)\n\n\nDesná () is a river situated in Olomouc region of Czech republic, left tributary of the Morava. It is 43.4 km long, and its basin area is 338 km. The Desná river originates at the confluence of Hučivá Desná and Divoká Desná in Kouty nad Desnou, the village situated in deep valley of High Ash Mountains. The Desná then goes southwest through a valley toward the town of Šumperk. After approximately 43.4 km, the Desná flows into the Morava river near Postřelmov village.The mean annual discharge at its mouth", "id": "20977814" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nSerbian forces then headed south into the Morava valley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Muslims fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Turks fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Muslims departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessalonika. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in", "id": "1099566" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n, in the center of the region. Other larger towns include Trebinje, Stolac, Široki Brijeg, Posušje, Ljubuški, Grude, Konjic, and Čapljina. Borders between Herzegovina and Bosnia are unclear and often disputed. The upper flow of the Neretva River lies in northern Herzegovina, a heavily forested area with fast-flowing rivers and high mountains. Konjic and Jablanica lie in this area. The Neretva rises on Lebršnik Mountain, close to the Montenegro border, and as the river flows west, it enters Herzegovina. The entire", "id": "3021137" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nUpper Neretva, of the Neretva river from its source at 1,227 m.a.s.l. and headwaters gorge all the way to the town of Konjic is 90 km, flows from south to north - north-west as most of the Bosnia and Herzegovina rivers belonging to the Danube watershed, and cover some 1,390 km with average elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva briefly expanding into a wide valley which provides fertile agricultural land. There exists a large Jablaničko Lake, artificially formed after construction of dam near Jablanica. \"Second", "id": "16797216" }, { "contents": "Kubršnica\n\n\nThe Kubršnica (Serbian Cyrillic: Кубршница) is a river in Šumadija region of central Serbia, a 42 km-long left and the longest tributary to the Jasenica river. The Kubršnica originates from the Venčac mountain, in the Jasenica sub-region of Šumadija, in the wider area of the town of Aranđelovac. The terrain in the source area of the river is rich in marble and fireclay. The river flows to the east, next to the Aranđelovac's suburb of Banja and turns north near Topola. After the villages", "id": "5629731" }, { "contents": "Peć Bistrica\n\n\nkm-long, Rugovo glacier. The gorge is sparsely inhabited (the village of Mali Štupelj). As it comes out of the gorge, the Peć Bistrica reaches the town of Peć and enters the bottom of the Metohija depression through which it flows for the rest of its course. It runs parallel to the flows of the White Drin to the north and the Dečanska Bistrica to the south, next to the villages of Goraždevac, Lješane, Jablanica, Drenovce and Zaimovo, before it empties into the White Drin south of", "id": "15886949" }, { "contents": "Zlatibor\n\n\nsylvestris\" var. \"zlatiborica\" is a subspecies of pine originating from the mountain, and is endangered today. A hill by the name of Cigla\",\" located near the nearby village of Jablanica, still has some borderline markings of the Kingdom of Serbia, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Zlatibor itself is located in the northern part of the Stari Vlah region, a historical border region between Raška, Herzegovina and Bosnia. It spreads over an area of , in length, southeast to northwest, and up", "id": "3906304" }, { "contents": "Serbian Christmas traditions\n\n\nhousehold. The members of the group were called \"koledari\". The \"koleda\" was carried out from the Feast of Saint Ignatius Theophorus (five days before Christmas) up until the Epiphany. This custom was best preserved in the upper Pčinja District, and in the region around the River South Morava in the Jablanica District, southeastern Serbia. Regarded as pagan and discouraged by the Serbian Orthodox Church, the \"koleda\" ceased to be performed among most of the Serbs during the 19th and 20th centuries. \"Koledari\"", "id": "20573743" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwere designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of Medveđa have small numbers of Albanians and their descendants remained. This was due to a local Ottoman Albanian commander Shahid Pasha from the Jablanica area negotiating on good terms with Prince Milan and thereby guaranteeing their presence. Some other Albanians such as merchants attempted to remain in Niš, but they left after murders occurred and their property was sold off at low values. In 1879, some Albanian refugees from", "id": "1099570" }, { "contents": "Kosovo Pomoravlje\n\n\nThe region's largest cities are Gjilan and Bujanovac. The region is known as \"Kosovsko Pomoravlje\" (Косовско Поморавље, \"Morava Valley of Kosovo\") in Serbian and as Lugina e Anamoraves Binçes (\"Valley of Binač Morava\") in Albanian. Its name is derived from the Binač Morava River, which flows through northern Macedonia, eastern Kosovo and southern Serbia as part of the Great Morava river system. The region includes part of the valley and the Karadak and Koznik mountains. Gjilan has six municipalities and 287 smaller", "id": "13339352" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nAlbanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje, with the intention of then turning west and", "id": "17667142" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\nThe Resavčina (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресавчина) is a river in Serbia, a 32 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. It is sometimes also called \"Resavica\" or \"Resava\" (not to be confused with another Velika Morava's right tributary of Resava or its own tributary of Resavica). The Resavčina originates near the village of Proštinac in Svilajnac municipality. The river originally flows to the north, but soon turns west at the village of Dubnica and enters the western half of the Veliko Pomoravlje region", "id": "4886222" }, { "contents": "Ibar (river)\n\n\nThe Ibar, also known as the Ibër and Ibri (, , ), is a river that flows through eastern Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, with a total length of . The river begins in the Hajla mountain, in Rožaje, eastern Montenegro, and passes through Kosovo to flow into the West Morava river near Kraljevo, central Serbia. It belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area is , with an average discharge of 60 m³/s at the mouth. It is not navigable. The Ibar originates from", "id": "4536148" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Ilirska Bistrica\n\n\nJablanica (; ) is a settlement southeast of Ilirska Bistrica in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. Jablanica is the site of three known mass graves or unmarked graves from the end of the Second World War. They all contain the remains of German soldiers from the 97th Corps that were killed at the beginning of May 1945. The Mountain Fields Mass Grave (), also known as the Mountain Mass Grave (), lies in a meadow about 1.6 km northeast of Jablanica and contains the remains of 10 soldiers. The Solne Mass", "id": "16911511" }, { "contents": "Čezsoča\n\n\nČezsoča (; ) is a settlement in the Municipality of Bovec in the Littoral region of Slovenia. It includes the hamlets of Gorenja Vas (), Dolenja Vas (), Jablanica, Kršovec, and Na Glavi. Čezsoča lies in the valley on the left bank of the Soča River. The terrain then rises up towards Mount Polovnik (1,480 m). East of the settlement is Humčič Hill (810 m), behind which rises Mount Javoršček (1,557 m). Oplenk Creek flows through the village between Gorenja Vas and", "id": "14920585" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nJablanica, the Neretva enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching in depth. Three hydroelectric dams operate between Jablanica and Mostar. When the Neretva expands for the second and final time, it reaches its third section. This area is often colloquially called the \"\"Bosnian and Herzegovinian California\"\". The last of its course forms wide alluvial delta, before the river empties into the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Tatinac (also known as the", "id": "12890344" }, { "contents": "Jablaničko lake\n\n\nJablaničko lake () is a large artificially formed lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva briefly expands into a wide valley. River provided lot of fertile, agricultural land there, before lake flooded most of it. The lake was created in 1953 after construction of Jablanica Dam near Jablanica in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake has an irregular elongated shape. Its width varies along its length. The lake is a popular vacation destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Swimming, boating and especially fishing are popular activities", "id": "13828307" }, { "contents": "Jablanica Dam\n\n\nThe Jablanica Dam is an arch-gravity dam on the Neretva River about northeast of Jablanica in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The dam was constructed between 1947 and 1955 with the primary purpose of hydroelectric power production. The power station was commissioned in two stages, from 1955 until 1958. The first generator was commissioned in February 1955. An upgrade in 2008 increased the installed capacity of the power station from 150 MW to 180 MW. The dam's power station is located about to the southeast near Jablanica", "id": "854706" }, { "contents": "Jablanik\n\n\nJablanik (Serbian Cyrillic: Јабланик) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Valjevo. Its highest peak \"Jablanik\" has an elevation of 1,275 meters(10001020_ above sea level. Jablanik is located at the source of the river Jablanica. It is separated from nearby Medvednik mountain by high pass Stolica, while the Debelo Brdo saddle separates it from Povlen in the southeast. The highest peak has the same name as the mountain itself - Jablanik, and is 1,275 m high. The hills around the peak are mainly", "id": "366162" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\nThe Nišava or Nishava (Bulgarian and , ) is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia, a right tributary, and with a length of 218 km also the longest one, of the South Morava. The Nišava originates in western Bulgaria, in the Stara Planina mountains (east of Kom Peak) near the village of Gintsi. Its source is close to the Serbian border. It enters Serbia after 67 km of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries. Because it flows through Gintsi, the upper course of the river is", "id": "9627075" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nAfter Mramorac village, the Jasenica spills over in several parallel flows, which continue until its confluence. After the Pridvorica and Vodice villages (on different arms of the river), the Jasenica reaches the town of Smederevska Palanka, the most populous settlement in its valley. This is also where the Kubršnica, its main tributary, flows into it from the left. The Jasenica then gently bends to the east, flowing into the Great Morava near the village of Veliko Orašje (the southern arm of the river flows through the town", "id": "3481502" }, { "contents": "Gruža (river)\n\n\nThe Gruža (Serbian Cyrillic: Гружа, ) is a river in central Serbia. The river is a 62 km long left tributary to the Zapadna Morava. The Gruža originates in the central part of the Rudnik mountain, right under the mountain's main settlement, the village of Rudnik, northeast of the town of Gornji Milanovac, central Serbia. The river flows south next to the village of Majdan, around the Rudnik mountain into the Takovo region and at the village of Nevade, just few kilometers away from Gornji Milanovac,", "id": "10971320" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\n(hamlet Panjak) on the Serbian-Bosnian border Crni Rzav meets the Jablanica river at the village Gornje Vardište and finally the river Beli Rzav at the village of Donje Vardište. The Rzav continues as the natural extension of the Beli Rzav, but since the Black Rzav is longer, the latter is considered to be the main headstream. It floes between the southernmost part of the Zvijezda mountain (\"Ponos\" peak) from the north and the Suha Gora mountain from the south, next to the villages of Prosjek (and", "id": "11540155" }, { "contents": "Ub (river)\n\n\nThe Ub (Serbian Cyrillic: Уб) is a river in western Serbia, a 57 km-long right and longest tributary to Tamnava river. The Ub originates from the Vlašić mountain in Podgorina region of west Serbia, near the village of Kasapo. From its source to the mouth, the river flows to the east, parallel to the river Tamnava, which it will eventually join. The villages located in the upper section of the river's flow are Družetić, Pambukovica and Čučuge, where the Ub slightly turns to the", "id": "2261401" }, { "contents": "Olomouc Region\n\n\nof the region is situated on the water level of the Morava River near to Kojetín in the Přerov District (190 m above sea level). The Morava river flows through the region and the majority of the region's territory belongs to Morava’s drainage basin. A small northern part of the region belongs to the drainage basin of Odra River, which flows to the Baltic Sea. The Olomouc Region offers a great variety of natural points of interest. Protected landscape area of the Jeseníky mountains offers a number of scenic places such", "id": "11419394" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina\n\n\nJablanica is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is situated on the Neretva river and Jablanica lake. The municipality of Jablanica is a major tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The municipality offer a wide variety of activities. The surrounding mountains such as Plasa, Čvrsnica and Prenj offer both hunting grounds and a variety of hiking trails. One popular hiking destination is \"Hajdučka Vrata\", a natural wonder, the product of wind", "id": "9009264" }, { "contents": "Krupá (Morava)\n\n\nKrupá (German: Graupa Bach) is a creek in Šumperk District, Moravia, left tributary of the Morava. Its length is 19,2 km and its drainage basin covers 112.7 km2. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 4.48 m³/s. The Krupá originates in Czech part of the Śnieżnik Mountains, 400 meters above sea level. The Krupá then goes south toward the town of Staré Město. It flows into the Morava river near Hanušovice town. River keeps its natural character with meanders and original riversides. A river bottom is", "id": "1745557" }, { "contents": "Oskava (river)\n\n\nOskava is a river in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic, left tributary of the Morava river. Its length is 50.3 km and its drainage basin covers 569 km. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 3.53 m/s. The Oskava originates from southeast slope of Kamenná hora in Hrubý Jeseník, 215 meters above sea level. The river is surrounded by woods in upper reaches, flows through hills of Nízký Jeseník in middle reaches and its lower reaches is situated in swampy floodplain of Litovelské Pomoraví Protected Landscape Area.", "id": "8538845" }, { "contents": "Crna Trava\n\n\nCrna Trava ( ) is a village and municipality located in the Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to 2011 census, the population of the village is 434 inhabitants, while population of the municipality is 1,663. This is the smallest by population and poorest municipality in Serbia. Crna Trava is famous for its migrant builders, who are considered the best in the region and are colloquially described as \"building half of Yugoslavia\". The name of the village in Serbian translates to \"Black Grass\". The origin of the name", "id": "18032485" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\n. At the village of Kušiljevo, the river receives the small stream of \"Beljeva\" from the left and turns northward, which is the general direction of its course for the rest of the flow. The river flows parallel to the Velika Morava river as its satellite flow, in the Morava's floodplain, so there are no settlements on the Resavica itself, but several large villages are located in its valley (Porodin, Žabari, Simićevo, Aleksandrovac Požarevački, Vlaški Do, Poljana), all of them located on the", "id": "4886223" }, { "contents": "Lugomir\n\n\nThe Lugomir (Serbian Cyrillic: Лугомир) is a river in central Serbia, a 57 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. The Lugomir originates from two headstreams, the Dulenska reka and the Županjevačka reka. The shorter headstream of Županjevačka reka (Cyrillic: \"Жупањевачка река\") originates from the mountain of Gledićke planine in southern Šumadija region of central Serbia. Its spring is just some 500 m away from the source of Lugomir's another headstream, the Dulenska reka. The river first flows to the east", "id": "5130918" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\ncities in Serbia, 10 km after which the Nišava empties into the Južna Morava. However, with the rapid growth of Niš in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs, the banks of the Nišava are urbanized almost to its mouth. After being divided into districts in 1992, the Nišava District (with Niš as administrative center) is named after the river. The river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area covers 4,086 km, of which about 73% in Serbia, the rest in Bulgaria", "id": "9627077" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nsection\" begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama river between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes a southern course and enter a largest canyons of its course, running through steep slopes of magnificent mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching 800–1200 meters in depth. From here Neretva flows toward the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Jezernica (also Tatinac), the Gornji and Donji Krupac, the Ljuta-Dindolka, the Jesenica, the Bjelimićka Rijeka, the Slatinica, the Račica, the Rakitnica, the Konjička", "id": "16797217" }, { "contents": "Resava (river)\n\n\nThe Resava (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресава) is a river in central Serbia, a 65 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava. It also gives the name to the surrounding Resava region, the Resava Monastery, the coal mines in its valley and a popular tourist destination of Resava Cave. The Resava originates from the Homolje region in eastern Serbia. It springs out at an altitude of 1,100 m and flows westward between the mountains of Beljanica (on the north) and Kučaj (on the south). In its", "id": "15040274" }, { "contents": "A1 motorway (Serbia)\n\n\nJužna Morava river. Southern section (Niš–Leskovac–Vranje–Macedonian border) consists of 128 km that are in service, while additional 26 km are under construction. Construction of southern section has been completed by May 2019, and last sections opened for traffic on 18 May 2019: Highway passes through valley of South Morava, passes west of Niš, by Merošina and Leskovac, and after Grdelica built highway ends. 26 kilometers of highway under construction passes through Grdelica gorge, very difficult terrain. This sections is often considered", "id": "1785427" }, { "contents": "Čivelj\n\n\nČivelj is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in the municipality of Jablanica, Herzegovina-Neretva Canton, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1991, the village had six inhabitants, all of whom were Muslims. In 2013, Čivelj had 10 inhabitants. Tourism is solid. Civelj is placed 8 kilometres from Jablanica and it is placed on Jablanica lake. In lake there are 5 types of fishes including the most popular \"pastrmka\". The village was found in 1911. by local fishermen. Near Civelj", "id": "4645021" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nAlthough these streams are of low outflow, there are also numerous wellsprings rising on both sides of the canyon at the river banks, with high-capacity discharge. Three large hydroelectric power stations operate in this section of the Neretva, between Jablanica and Mostar, namely Grabovica HPP, Salakovac HPP and Mostar HPP. Jablanica lake is a large artificial lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva expands into a wide valley. The river provided fertile, agricultural land before the lake flooded most of it. The lake", "id": "12890353" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nThe Jasenica (Serbian Cyrillic: Јасеница, ) is a river in central Serbia. It is long and is the left tributary of the Great Morava. This river gives the name to the surrounding region. The Jasenica originates from several streams, most notably the Đurinci (Cyrillic: Ђуринци) from Venčac mountain, and the Srebrenica (Cyrillic: Сребреница) from the northern slopes of the Rudnik mountain in central Serbia. At its origin, the river runs through the eastern border of the Kačer region. It flows to the southeast", "id": "3481500" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nin north Skopje, Macedonia. The streams Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is, after passing the Macedonian-Serbian border, known as the Binačka Morava. After 49 km it meets the Preševska Moravica at Bujanovac, and for the remainder, 246 km, flows as the South Morava. The South Morava belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and its own drainage area is 15,696 km², of which 1,237 km² is in Bulgaria (through its right tributary Nišava). Its average", "id": "15699472" }, { "contents": "Pešter\n\n\nRivers Uvac, Vapa, Jablanica and Grabovica flow through the plateau. In the geologic past, the field was a large lake, of which only a small Sjenica lake near the village of Tuzinje remained. The soil is mostly karst interspersed with pastures. Economy of the area relies primarily on cattle breeding, chiefly sheep. Pešter is famous for its dairy products, especially the \"Sjenica cheese\" (\"Sjenički sir\"), as well as lamb and prosciutto. The plateau is sparsely populated: most settlements are on the", "id": "16748290" }, { "contents": "Sredačka župa\n\n\nSredačka Župa (; \"county of Sredska\") is a remote geographical region, a valley, in southeastern Kosovo, below the Šar Mountains at the source of the Prizrenska Bistrica. The region, an oval basin, lies below the Šar Mountains, at the source, upper stream of the Prizrenska Bistrica (\"Prizren river\"). South of the region between the Prizren mountains and Koritnik mountain, lies the Gora region. It currently includes Sredska, Pousko, Jablanica, Lokvica, Rečane, Živinjane, Planjane, Nebregošte,", "id": "13372292" }, { "contents": "Binačka Morava\n\n\nBinačka Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Биначка Морава; ) or (\"Mirusha\") is a river which flows in southeastern Kosovo and North Macedonia. It flows generally in the southwest to northeast direction, from Macedonian border to Bujanovac, where, after 49 km, meets Preševska Moravica, to create South Morava. The river begins in the mountain of Skopska Crna Gora, in North Macedonia, north of its capital Skopje. Streams of Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is,", "id": "12867615" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwar, the Albanian population depending on the area reacted differently to incoming Serbian forces by either offering resistance or fleeing toward nearby mountains and Ottoman Kosovo. Although most of these Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces, a small presence was allowed to remain in the Jablanica valley where their descendants live today. Serbs from Lab moved to Serbia during and after the first round of hostilities in 1876, while incoming Albanian refugees thereafter 1878 repopulated their villages. Albanian refugees also settled alongside the north-eastern Ottoman-Serbian border, in urban areas", "id": "1099553" }, { "contents": "Banjska River\n\n\nThe Banjska River ( / \"Banjska reka\", \"Baths River\"), is a river in southern Serbia, the right tributary of Toplica in which it flows near Kuršumlija. It rises under the far south-eastern branch of Kopaonik. It is 22 km long, with a river basin area of 155 km². The average flow at the mouth is 0,7 m³/s. The valley of the river is mostly ravines, while the basin is rich in forest. The Kuršumlija-Kuršumlijska Banja-Prepolac Pass-Podujevo-", "id": "14979528" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nby a catastrophic flood. Then unregulated river Jablanica, swollen after a long rainy period, broke on June 6, spilled out of its banks and caused enormous material damage Lebane. Flood toll was paid and human victims (killed two people). After this tragic event, with financial help, Lebane begins to industrialize faster, and the process of industrialization has caused more versatile and faster development of the city. According to the 2011 census, the municipality has 22,000 inhabitants. The ethnic composition of the municipality: The following table", "id": "17523935" }, { "contents": "Čvrsnica\n\n\nČvrsnica () is a mountain in the Dinarides of Bosnia and Herzegovina, located in northern Herzegovina, most of the mountain is located in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton municipalities of Mostar and Jablanica while the smaller part of the mountain, around 10% is located in the municipality of Posušje. The highest peak (Pločno) is 2228 metres. Čvrsnica is surrounded by the river Neretva from the east (20 km), its tributaries Doljanka (18 km) from the north and Drežanka (19.8 km) from the south,", "id": "6129606" }, { "contents": "Myjava (river)\n\n\nThe Myjava River is a river in western Slovakia and for a small part in the Czech Republic and left tributary of the Morava River. It rises in the White Carpathians near the village of Nová Lhota in Moravia, but crosses the Czech-Slovak border shortly afterwards and flows in a southern direction until the town of Myjava, where it enters the Myjava Hills and turns west. Near Sobotište it flows into the Záhorie Lowland and turns south until the village of Jablonica, turning northwest and from Senica it flows west, passing through", "id": "2099838" }, { "contents": "West Morava\n\n\nSouth and Great Morava's meridian (south-to-north) flow, the West Morava runs in an opposed, latitudinal (west-to-east) direction, dividing the region of Šumadija of the central Serbia from the southern parts of the country. Due to the West Morava's direction, it flows between many mountains, regions and sub-regions: The West Morava river valley, Zapadno Pomoravlje, is economically the most developed of all three Morava river valleys. With the valley of the Ibar, the West", "id": "7786624" }, { "contents": "Ralja (river)\n\n\nThe Ralja () is a river in Šumadija region of Serbia, a 51 km long left tributary to the Jezava, a tributary of the Great Morava river. It also gives its name to the surrounding Šumadija's subregion of Ralja. The Ralja originates from the northern part of the Kosmaj mountain, north of the village of Velika Ivanča, in the Sopot municipality of the City of Belgrade. Almost from the source, the river valley is a route for the Belgrade-Niš railway. At the villages of Popović and Mali", "id": "2491229" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nBovan gorge carved by the river and is very popular local and regional tourist destination, especially among campers and fishermen, but the coastline is not put in order. The river continues to the south, in an inverse flow, and after the villages of Subotinac and Kraljevo, it empties into the Južna Morava at the town of Aleksinac. The lower section used to be a coal mining area too, just like the upper one, but the mines (Aleksinački Rudnik) are closed now. The Sokobanjska Moravica brlongs to the Black", "id": "1726358" }, { "contents": "Golijska Moravica\n\n\nThe Golijska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Голијска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in western Serbia. With a length of 98 km, it is the longer headstream of the Zapadna Morava (it forms it with the Đetinja), and thus, of the Velika Morava. Its name, Moravica, means \"little Morava\" in Serbian, and it also gives its name to the surrounding region and the modern Moravica District of Serbia. The Golijska Moravica originates from the western slopes of the Golija mountain and flows", "id": "5380325" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\n. The Nišava is not navigable. It is not only the longest tributary of the Južna Morava, but also the largest one in terms of discharge (36 km/s). It has many smaller tributaries, the most important being the Temštica from the right, and the Jerma (or Sukovska reka), Crvena reka, Koritnička reka and Kutinska reka from the left. The Nišava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia: the route follows the valleys of the Morava", "id": "9627078" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nThe Toplica (Serbian Cyrillic: Топлица, ) is a river in southern Serbia. The river is 130 km long and gives its name to the region it flows through, which constitutes most of the modern Toplica District of Serbia. The Toplica originates under the name of \"Duboka\" from the eastern slopes of the Kopaonik mountain, just south of the highest peak, Pančićev vrh. It flows to the southeast, on the western slopes of the Lepa Gora mountain, next to the villages of Merćez, Selova, Žuč,", "id": "19530451" }, { "contents": "Great Morava\n\n\nof the Velika Morava's right tributary Resava). The average discharge of the Velika Morava on its confluence with Danube is 255 m³/s (120 m³/s brought by Zapadna Morava, 100 m³/s by Južna Morava, and 35 m³/s amounted by the Velika Morava itself). Tributaries of the Velika Morava are short, the longest one being the Jasenica (79 km) and others rarely exceeding 50 km. Right tributaries are: Jovanovačka reka, Crnica, Ravanica, Resava and Resavica (or Resavčina). Left tributaries are more numerous,", "id": "2295702" }, { "contents": "Vevčani\n\n\nVevčani () is a village in the Republic of North Macedonia. It is the only settlement and seat of Vevčani Municipality. The village of Vevčani is found in the southwestern range at the foot of the Jablanica mountain range. It is situated from 800 – 950 metres above sea level. The village is located 14 km North-West of the town of Struga. The village is situated near the villages of Oktisi, Velešta, Podgorci, Gorna Belica with the Albanian border to the West of the village. The famous Vevčani", "id": "5042995" } ]
The Jablanica ( Serbian : Јабланица , ) is an river in southern Serbia . A left tributary of the South ( or Južna ) Morava river , it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia 's Jablanica District , with the region contributing about one third of the district 's area . The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain , near the village of Grbavce , on the administrative border of the Kosovo province . The area is rich in thermal springs , so several spas are located near the river : Stara Banja , Ravna Banja and Sijarina with popular Sijarinska Banja . At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary Čokotinska reka ( Cyrillic : Чокотинска река ) , turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point . The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the and Radan mountains , in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the in Kosovo . The river flows eastward , passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo , before reaching the town of [START_ENT] Lebane [END_ENT] where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac , part of the depression of Leskovac , which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava . In the region , near Lebane , a famed archeological find of ( Iustiniana Prima ) is located . The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo , Vranovce , Bošnjace , Turekovac and Stopanje , reaches Vinarce , the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac , and turns north . First it flows parallel to the Veternica river , to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje , then parallel to the Južna Morava . After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava . From Pečenjevce , a parallel flow ( canal ) begins , connecting the Jablanica and s , some 15 km to the north . Through Južna Morava , the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin , draining an area of 895 km ² itself . It 's not navigable and has an average discharge of 6 m ³ / s , which in rainy years grows much higher , so the river floods its valley causing lots of material damage . The name of the river , Jablanica , in Serbian means the
8240b111-3a88-463a-a9bd-ae88c6221048_river:11
[{"answer": "Lebane", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "3723050", "title": "Lebane"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nreaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac, part of the depression of Leskovac, which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. In the region, near Lebane, a famed archeological find of Caričin grad (\"Iustiniana Prima\") is located. The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo, Vranovce, Bošnjace, Turekovac and Stopanje, reaches Vinarce, the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac", "id": "3481303" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\n, and turns north. First it flows parallel to the Veternica river, to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje, then parallel to the Južna Morava. After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava. From Pečenjevce, a parallel flow (canal) begins, connecting the Jablanica and Toplica rivers, some 15 km to the north. Through Južna Morava, the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, draining an area of itself. It's not navigable", "id": "3481304" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\npopular Sijarinska Banja. At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary \"Čokotinska reka\" (Cyrillic: \"Чокотинска река\"), turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point. The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the Majdan and Radan mountains, in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the District of Priština in Kosovo. The river flows eastward, passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo, before", "id": "3481302" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nThe Jablanica (, ) is an river in southern Serbia. A left tributary of the South (or Južna) Morava river, it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia's Jablanica District, with the region contributing about one third of the district's area. The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain, near the village of Grbavce, on the border with Kosovo. The area is rich in thermal springs, so several spas are located near the river: Stara Banja, Ravna Banja and Sijarina with", "id": "3481301" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nJablanica with third parallel flow, the \"Sušica\", being formed in between. Settlements include many small villages, like Vina, Bukova Gora, Miroševce, Žabljane, Beli Potok and Strojkovce. In the Leskovac field, the river gently turns north, receives the Sušica from the left and reaches the town of Leskovac. The Veternica continues northward, being connected to the Jablanica river by the canal at the village of Bogojevce, before it empties into the Južna Morava. The Veternica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its", "id": "11539775" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nThe Veternica (Serbian Cyrillic: Ветерница, ) is a river in southern Serbia, a 75 km long left tributary to the Južna Morava, which gives the name to the region surrounding its valley. The Veternica originates from the Grot peak, the southernmost part of the Kukavica mountain. Four smaller streams meet at the village of Vlase and continue to the north as the Veternica. The river flows next to the villages of Golemo Selo, Oštra Glava and Gagince, where it flows parallel to the Jablanica river. As the Veternica", "id": "11539773" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nbends to the northeast, it enters the low Veternica region, part of the Leskovac field in the composite valley of the Južna Morava. Small region, located between the Kukavica mountain on the south and the Jablanica region on the north, is divided in two micro-regions, upper one being centered on the small town of Vučje (which is not located on the river itself) while the center of the lower micro-region is the town of Leskovac. As it enters the region, the Veternica furthers away from the", "id": "11539774" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nthe west, Kukavica and Čemernik in the south and Babička Gora, Seličevica and Suva Planina to the east. The largest river in the region of Leskovac is the South Morava River, which flows south to north. Tributaries of the South Morava are: the Vlasina river, which collects water from Lake Vlasina and flows through Crna Trava and Vlasotince; the Veternica river, which flows through Leskovac; the Jablanica river, which springs from the foot of Goljak and flows through Medveđa and Lebane; the Pusta (Deserted) river,", "id": "2857704" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nof 590 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and is not navigable. The region of Pusta Reka mostly correspondence with the river's watershed. It is located between the Pasjača mountain and lower Toplica region (on the north), the Southern Pomoravlje (Field of Leskovac, on the east), the Jablanica region (on the south) and the Radan mountain (on the west). The region is an agricultural area, almost without any industry, except for some smaller facilities in regional center, Bojnik", "id": "12523581" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nof Podina, Voljčince, Badnjevac and the smaller regional center Žitorađa. After the Toplica reaches municipal center of Doljevac, it enters the most densely populated part of the south Pomoravlje, turns north and flows into the Južna Morava at the village of Orljane, across the medieval ruins of Kurvin grad, as Južna Morava's longest left tributary. The Toplica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its own drainage area of 2,217 km². The river is not navigable. The river valley is a major traffic route in southern Serbia as", "id": "19530454" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nThe Sokobanjska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Сокобањска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in central eastern Serbia, a 58 km-long right tributary to the Južna Morava river. The Sokobanjska Moravica originates from the eastern slopes of the Devica mountain, near the village of Skrobnica. The river flows to the north, turns westward at the village of Levovik and enters the Banja region. The rivers flows between the northern slopes of the Devica and Ozren mountains (on the south) and southern slopes of the Rtanj mountain", "id": "1726356" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\nmouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. As the wider Jabllanica region, Medveđa also had an Albanian majority. These Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces in a way that today would be characterized as ethnic cleansing. Due to depopulation and economic considerations some small numbers of Albanians were allowed to stay and return though not to their previous settlements and instead were designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of", "id": "7117787" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\n, a notable Muslim population existed in the districts of Niš, Pirot, Vranje, Leskovac, Prokuplje and Kuršumlija. The rural parts of Toplica, Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the", "id": "1099558" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nthe southernmost slopes of the Suva Planina and Babička Gora mountains, it reaches the town of Vlasotince and western parts of the low Leskovac field, part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. After the villages of Batulovce and Stajkovce, the Vlasina empties into the Južna Morava, east of the Leskovac's eastern suburb of Mrštane. The Vlasina drains an area of 991 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin and it is not navigable. On 26 June 1988, after a period of heavy rains, Vlasina was a", "id": "14981332" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nThe Pusta River ( / \"Pusta reka\", \"Desolate River\") is a river in southern Serbia, a 71-km long left tributary to the South Morava. It also gives the name to the Pusta Reka region in its valley. The river originates northeast of Prolom Banja, near the Sokolovica village, on the northern tip of the Radan mountain, as the \"Golema River\" (\"Big River\"). It flows eastward, between the mountains of Radan (to the south) and Pasjača (to the", "id": "12523579" }, { "contents": "Persecution of Muslims during Ottoman contraction\n\n\nReka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the Turks were of Albanian origin. The Muslims in the cities of Niš and Pirot were Turkish-speaking; Vranje and Leskovac were Turkish- and Albanian-speaking; Prokuplje", "id": "8891598" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nvalley between Konjic and Jablanica, known simply as \"Neretva\" since Middle Ages, the new point for hydrographical division became dam of the Jablanica HPP where also is a place of confluence of the rivers Neretva and Rama. Here the Neretva river suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before it reach town of Jablanica. From this point it turns again toward south and enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes of the mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica", "id": "12890350" }, { "contents": "Rama (Neretva)\n\n\nRama is a river in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a major tributary of the Neretva. It joins it from the right by discharging into Neretva's artificial reservoir, Jablaničko lake, at place called Marina Pećina, near village of Gračac, between location of underground powerhouse of Rama Hydroelectric Power Station and Jablanica Dam, depending on water level in Jablaničko lake, some 15 kilometers upstream from Jablanica. The Rama flows through municipalities of Prozor-Rama and Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, while its headwaters together with wellsprings in the region of", "id": "3052779" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\nThe Kolubara (Serbian Cyrillic: Колубара, ), is a long river in western Serbia; it is an eastern, right tributary to the Sava river. Kolubara is formed by the two small rivers Obnica and Jablanica. \"Obnica\" is the river in Western Serbia that springs at the foot of the mountain Medvednik. It flows to the East, through the villages of Suvodanje, Bobova, Majinović, Pričević and Zlatarić, and at the city of Valjevo meets the river \"Jablanica\" and forms Kolubara. The Obnica is", "id": "20109582" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\ndating to the 4th century AD lay at various locations of the town, as it was a transitory zone of Upper Moesia; travel and postal stations are among the finds. Toponyms such as \"Arbanaška\" and \"Đjake\" shows an Albanian presence in the Toplica and Southern Morava regions (located north-east of contemporary Kosovo) before the expulsion of Albanians during 1877–1878 period. The rural parts of Jablanica valley and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river", "id": "7117786" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\naverage elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva again expands into a third and largest valley which provided fertile agricultural land before it was flooded by large artificial reservoir, Jablaničko Lake, formed after construction of a Jablanica Dam near town of Jablanica. The second section begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before reaches town of Jablanica, from which point turns again toward south. From", "id": "12890343" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nLebane () is a town and municipality located in Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 10,062 inhabitants, while the municipality has 20,000 inhabitants. The town is located at the confluence of the rivers Jablanica and Šumanska Reka, in the alluvial plain created by the former. Just northeast of the town a larger plain called Leskovačko polje extends toward the town of Leskovac, which is the district seat. The elevation of the town of Lebane is between 275.2 and 420 MASL.", "id": "17523929" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nRakic writes about it as a \"\"big village populated by Serbs, in a valley, on the river Jablanica, on its left bank.\"\" Only when Lebane got the role of Jablanica district headquarters, it began to gradually develop in a direction of a small town. The core of this small town was a series of houses along the Jablanica which is 45m wide here (as is even now); at the end of this series are the buildings of the Court and Municipality. The main feature of", "id": "17523931" }, { "contents": "Štulac (Lebane)\n\n\nthe village of Prekopčelica. The village is located on the valley slopes of the Caričin Potok creek. It is scattered between the altitudes of . It is situated in the wider Pusta Reka region. The village rests on the western slopes of the , which here divides the regions of Pusta Reka and Jablanica. On the west, the easternmost slopes of the Radan mountain begin. The village area covers . The Slavs settled in the area in the 7th century, centering around the ruins of Iustiniana Prima. Due to the lack of", "id": "11151840" }, { "contents": "Grdelica\n\n\nGrdelica () is a town in southern Serbia. It is situated in the Leskovac municipality, in the Jablanica District. The total population of the town was 3,194 people as of the 2011 census. For census purposes, Grdelica is divided into two adjacent parts, southern \"Grdelica town\" (\"Grdelica varoš\"; population 2,136) and northern \"Grdelica village\" (\"Grdelica selo\"; 1,058). Grdelica lies at the South Morava river, on the mountainous terrain at the entrance of the Grdelica Gorge. It", "id": "460756" }, { "contents": "Gornji Bučumet\n\n\nall settlements registered separately in the census. The three settlements lie in the South Morava basin, above the Jablanica river, and as such are located in the Upper Jablanica region. The highest mountain in Upper Bučumet is Paramid (853), with the mountain of Sv. Petar (1149) being located in Middle Bučumet. The three neighbourhoods of Bučumet are 470 to 853 metres above sea level. There is a medieval church built on the ruins of an older church. During the Toplica-Jablanica Operation (, ) in", "id": "12752738" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nthe huge floods of its daughter river. The South Morava has 157 tributaries. The most important left tributaries are: Jablanica, Veternica, Pusta reka and Toplica. Right tributaries are: Vrla, Vlasina, Nišava (the longest) and Sokobanjska Moravica. The South Morava has a significant potential for electricity production, and a huge hydroelectrical system (Vlasina- Vrla I-IV power stations) has been constructed in its drainage basin. To a certain extent, its waters are used for irrigation. The river valley's most important role", "id": "15699476" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nThe Rasina () is a river in south central Serbia. The long river flows through the Rasina region, gives its name to the modern Rasina District of Serbia, and flows into the Zapadna Morava near the city of Kruševac. Its historical name is Arsen (Αρσεγα). The Rasina springs from the southern slopes of the Goč mountain, near the village of Rašovka, southwest of the most famous Serbian spa, Vrnjačka Banja. The river originally flows to the southeast, around the mountains of Željin and Kopaonik, next to", "id": "209716" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nLeskovac (Serbian Cyrillic: Лесковац, ) is a city and the administrative center of the Jablanica District in southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the city urban area has 60,288 inhabitants, while the city administrative area has 144,206. Traces of life of the Brnjica culture (8th century BC) is seen at the Hisar Hill (Hisar Leskovac) that was protected by a deep moat with a palisade on its inner side, a fortification similar to that of another fortification on the site near Zlokućane in the Velika Morava basin", "id": "2857693" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nThe favorable location and the richness of nature made Jablanica valley important place since the earliest times. Traffic affordable and fertile, Leskovac valley has provided favorable conditions for the settlement of population. Archaeological findings, of which the most important are Hissar and Caričin grad (Iustiniana Prima) show that life in this area, continuously evolved from prehistoric man to date. First mention of Lebane as Hlebane dates back to 1512. Lebane is formed as a village of the same name after the liberation in 1878. Visiting Serbia in 1880s, M.", "id": "17523930" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nThe South Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Јужна Морава, Serbian Latin: \"Južna Morava\", ; ) is a river in eastern Kosovo and in southern Serbia, which represents the shorter headwater of Great Morava. Today, it is 295 km long, including its source river Binačka Morava. It flows generally in the south to north direction, from Macedonian border to Kosovo and onwards to Central Serbia, where it meets West Morava at Stalać, to create Great Morava. The river rises in the Skopska Crna Gora mountain", "id": "15699471" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\nis the Rzav's longer headstream. It originates from the Čigota mountain, eastern section of the Zlatibor mountain. The river originally flows northward, next to the villages of Vodice and Jokina Ćuprija, reaches the central section of the Zlatibor where it is dammed and creates the artificial Ribnica lake (surface area of 10 km²), after the nearby village of Ribnica. After the lake, the river sharply turns west and soon gets followed by the parallel stream of the \"Jablanica\" river. After crossing the village of Mokra Gora", "id": "11540154" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\n25 km long. Jablanica originates on the eastern slopes of the Jablanik mountain, just few kilometers away from Obnica. It curves around Parač mountain and next to the village of Balinović, before it meets Obnica in Valjevo. Jablanica is 21.5 km long. This is also the beginning of the long region of the Kolubara valley, divided in two large parts, referred to as Upper (\"gornja\") Kolubara and Lower (\"donja\") Kolubara (around the Belgrade's suburb of Obrenovac). At Valjevo, the", "id": "20109583" }, { "contents": "Jablanica District\n\n\nThe Jablanica District (, ) is one of nine administrative districts of Southern and Eastern Serbia. It expands in the south-eastern parts of Serbia. According to the 2011 census results, it has a population of 215,463 inhabitants. The administrative center of the district is the city of Leskovac. The district encompasses the municipalities of: According to the 2011 census results, the Jablanica Distract has a total population of 216,304 inhabitants. Ethnic composition of the Jablanica District: Famous cultural-historic monuments in this District are: the Roman", "id": "13223854" }, { "contents": "Kalna, Crna Trava\n\n\nKalna () is a small village in the Crna Trava municipality of the Jablanica District of Serbia. Kalna village is an old Serbian village, 35 km away from the Crna Trava. It is located between Tumba and Serbian-Bulgarian border, at an altitude of 500 to 1100 m. The total area is rural area of 7285 hectares. The Kalna can be reached from three directions: The road in this way was there since the Turkish rule. It was the shortest connection of Leskovac valley (Dubočica) to Sofia and Constantinople", "id": "11211518" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina-Neretva Canton\n\n\ntook place there during World War II and there is a large museum in Jablanica dedicated to these battles. The Neretva river runs through the cities of Konjic, Jablanica, Mostar and Čapljina before it flows through Croatia and into the Adriatic Sea. There are large lakes in the canton such as the Jablanica lake located around the city Jablanica. The southern most municipality in the canton is the Neum municipality which borders the Adriatic sea and the eastern most municipality is the Ravno municipality along the border with Croatia. Of the ten cantons comprising", "id": "3225485" }, { "contents": "Vardar Corps\n\n\nThe Vardar Corps was a corps of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland (JVuO) that operated on the left bank of the river Vardar during the World War II in Yugoslavia on the territory of modern-day North Macedonia and southern Serbia. Its commander was former Captain of the Royal Guard of the Royal Yugoslav Army Stojan Krstić. It consisted of four brigades with total number of 1,000 soldiers. Together with Jablanica Corps, South Morava Corps and Flying Corps it belonged under \"Mountain Staff 110\" () located in Sijarinska Banja", "id": "11325997" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nthe villages of Mitrovo Polje, Bzenica, Pleš, Jablanica, Grčak, Toskići, Budilovina and Milentija. When the Rasina reaches the small town of Brus, it enters the upper Rasina region and continues next to the villages of Tršanovci, Lepenac and Razbojna. At this point the river reaches the western side of the Veliki Jastrebac mountain, and makes a wide, elbow turn to the north. In this part of the course, the Rasina also makes a southeast border of the Aleksandrovačka Župa region. After the villages of Bogiše", "id": "209717" }, { "contents": "Doljanka\n\n\nDoljanka is a right tributary of Neretva river in North Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The length of Doljanka is around 18 km and reaches an altitude drop of about 400 m. Arises from sources scattered type under the far northeast slopes of Vran mountain on altitude of 1324 m. It runs through limestone canyon, which is high up to 1,200 m and flows through the village of Doljani. Doljanka flows into the Neretva River between Jablanica and Mostar, at an altitude of 300 m. It is also the connection over which trouts from the Neretva", "id": "8874715" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nValley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Albanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje", "id": "17667163" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n. The Neretva then flows northwest, through Konjic. It enters the Jablanica Reservoir (\"Jablaničko jezero\"), one of the largest in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake ends near the town of Jablanica. From here on, the Neretva turns southward, continuing to the Adriatic Sea. With the mountains lining its shores gradually receding, the Neretva enters a valley where the city of Mostar lies. It flows under the old bridge (\"Stari most\") and continues, now wider, toward the town of Čapljina and", "id": "3021139" }, { "contents": "Radan (mountain)\n\n\nRadan (Serbian Cyrillic: Радан) is a mountain in southern Serbia, near the town of Kuršumlija. Its highest peak, Šopot, has an elevation of 1,408 meters above sea level. Radan separates the valleys of the Toplica and Jablanica rivers. It is well covered with deciduous and evergreen forests. The best known spot on Radan is the Devil's Town – a peculiar rock formation consisting of hundreds of mushroom-like posts, located on its southern slopes. Near the Devil's Town there are ruins of Ivanova kula –", "id": "3957176" }, { "contents": "Crni Timok\n\n\nкотлина, \"depression of Crna Reka\"), populated with many smaller villages (Lukovo, Jablanica, Valakonje, Savinac, Gamzigrad, Zvezdan). At Gamzigrad there is also an important archeological site from Roman times. After a flow of 84 km, the Crni Timok reaches Zaječar, where it joins the Beli Timok River, forming the Veliki Timok River. It drains an area of . Early in its course it receives from the right the Radovanska, Suva, Velika, Salešča, Šarbanovačka, Jasenova, Bajnska and Suva", "id": "11459489" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (mountain range)\n\n\nJablanica ( ; ) is a mountain range in Southern and Southeastern Europe, stretching north-south direction across the border of Albania and the Republic of North Macedonia. The long mountain ridge is higher than for approximately , while the highest part, located in its very center, is Black Stone at high. Both countries have 50% of the mountain, Albania the west and North Macedonia the east. Jablanica Mountain contains many large mountain lakes. Shebenik mountain is located just to the west of Jablanica and give name to the Shebenik", "id": "3232652" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nThe Vlasina (Serbian Cyrillic: Власина), is a river in southeastern Serbia, a 70 km-long outflow of the Vlasina Lake and a right tributary to the Južna Morava, which also gives its name to the surrounding Vlasina region. The Vlasina flows out from the Vlasina Lake at an altitude of 1,213 m. Lake used to be a large, muddy peat bog, but in 1947-51 the Vlasina was dammed by the long, earth dam and the bog was turned into an artificial lake. The river flows to", "id": "14981330" }, { "contents": "Desná (Morava)\n\n\nDesná () is a river situated in Olomouc region of Czech republic, left tributary of the Morava. It is 43.4 km long, and its basin area is 338 km. The Desná river originates at the confluence of Hučivá Desná and Divoká Desná in Kouty nad Desnou, the village situated in deep valley of High Ash Mountains. The Desná then goes southwest through a valley toward the town of Šumperk. After approximately 43.4 km, the Desná flows into the Morava river near Postřelmov village.The mean annual discharge at its mouth", "id": "20977814" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nSerbian forces then headed south into the Morava valley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Muslims fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Turks fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Muslims departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessalonika. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in", "id": "1099566" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n, in the center of the region. Other larger towns include Trebinje, Stolac, Široki Brijeg, Posušje, Ljubuški, Grude, Konjic, and Čapljina. Borders between Herzegovina and Bosnia are unclear and often disputed. The upper flow of the Neretva River lies in northern Herzegovina, a heavily forested area with fast-flowing rivers and high mountains. Konjic and Jablanica lie in this area. The Neretva rises on Lebršnik Mountain, close to the Montenegro border, and as the river flows west, it enters Herzegovina. The entire", "id": "3021137" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nUpper Neretva, of the Neretva river from its source at 1,227 m.a.s.l. and headwaters gorge all the way to the town of Konjic is 90 km, flows from south to north - north-west as most of the Bosnia and Herzegovina rivers belonging to the Danube watershed, and cover some 1,390 km with average elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva briefly expanding into a wide valley which provides fertile agricultural land. There exists a large Jablaničko Lake, artificially formed after construction of dam near Jablanica. \"Second", "id": "16797216" }, { "contents": "Kubršnica\n\n\nThe Kubršnica (Serbian Cyrillic: Кубршница) is a river in Šumadija region of central Serbia, a 42 km-long left and the longest tributary to the Jasenica river. The Kubršnica originates from the Venčac mountain, in the Jasenica sub-region of Šumadija, in the wider area of the town of Aranđelovac. The terrain in the source area of the river is rich in marble and fireclay. The river flows to the east, next to the Aranđelovac's suburb of Banja and turns north near Topola. After the villages", "id": "5629731" }, { "contents": "Peć Bistrica\n\n\nkm-long, Rugovo glacier. The gorge is sparsely inhabited (the village of Mali Štupelj). As it comes out of the gorge, the Peć Bistrica reaches the town of Peć and enters the bottom of the Metohija depression through which it flows for the rest of its course. It runs parallel to the flows of the White Drin to the north and the Dečanska Bistrica to the south, next to the villages of Goraždevac, Lješane, Jablanica, Drenovce and Zaimovo, before it empties into the White Drin south of", "id": "15886949" }, { "contents": "Zlatibor\n\n\nsylvestris\" var. \"zlatiborica\" is a subspecies of pine originating from the mountain, and is endangered today. A hill by the name of Cigla\",\" located near the nearby village of Jablanica, still has some borderline markings of the Kingdom of Serbia, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Zlatibor itself is located in the northern part of the Stari Vlah region, a historical border region between Raška, Herzegovina and Bosnia. It spreads over an area of , in length, southeast to northwest, and up", "id": "3906304" }, { "contents": "Serbian Christmas traditions\n\n\nhousehold. The members of the group were called \"koledari\". The \"koleda\" was carried out from the Feast of Saint Ignatius Theophorus (five days before Christmas) up until the Epiphany. This custom was best preserved in the upper Pčinja District, and in the region around the River South Morava in the Jablanica District, southeastern Serbia. Regarded as pagan and discouraged by the Serbian Orthodox Church, the \"koleda\" ceased to be performed among most of the Serbs during the 19th and 20th centuries. \"Koledari\"", "id": "20573743" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwere designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of Medveđa have small numbers of Albanians and their descendants remained. This was due to a local Ottoman Albanian commander Shahid Pasha from the Jablanica area negotiating on good terms with Prince Milan and thereby guaranteeing their presence. Some other Albanians such as merchants attempted to remain in Niš, but they left after murders occurred and their property was sold off at low values. In 1879, some Albanian refugees from", "id": "1099570" }, { "contents": "Kosovo Pomoravlje\n\n\nThe region's largest cities are Gjilan and Bujanovac. The region is known as \"Kosovsko Pomoravlje\" (Косовско Поморавље, \"Morava Valley of Kosovo\") in Serbian and as Lugina e Anamoraves Binçes (\"Valley of Binač Morava\") in Albanian. Its name is derived from the Binač Morava River, which flows through northern Macedonia, eastern Kosovo and southern Serbia as part of the Great Morava river system. The region includes part of the valley and the Karadak and Koznik mountains. Gjilan has six municipalities and 287 smaller", "id": "13339352" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nAlbanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje, with the intention of then turning west and", "id": "17667142" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\nThe Resavčina (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресавчина) is a river in Serbia, a 32 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. It is sometimes also called \"Resavica\" or \"Resava\" (not to be confused with another Velika Morava's right tributary of Resava or its own tributary of Resavica). The Resavčina originates near the village of Proštinac in Svilajnac municipality. The river originally flows to the north, but soon turns west at the village of Dubnica and enters the western half of the Veliko Pomoravlje region", "id": "4886222" }, { "contents": "Ibar (river)\n\n\nThe Ibar, also known as the Ibër and Ibri (, , ), is a river that flows through eastern Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, with a total length of . The river begins in the Hajla mountain, in Rožaje, eastern Montenegro, and passes through Kosovo to flow into the West Morava river near Kraljevo, central Serbia. It belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area is , with an average discharge of 60 m³/s at the mouth. It is not navigable. The Ibar originates from", "id": "4536148" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Ilirska Bistrica\n\n\nJablanica (; ) is a settlement southeast of Ilirska Bistrica in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. Jablanica is the site of three known mass graves or unmarked graves from the end of the Second World War. They all contain the remains of German soldiers from the 97th Corps that were killed at the beginning of May 1945. The Mountain Fields Mass Grave (), also known as the Mountain Mass Grave (), lies in a meadow about 1.6 km northeast of Jablanica and contains the remains of 10 soldiers. The Solne Mass", "id": "16911511" }, { "contents": "Čezsoča\n\n\nČezsoča (; ) is a settlement in the Municipality of Bovec in the Littoral region of Slovenia. It includes the hamlets of Gorenja Vas (), Dolenja Vas (), Jablanica, Kršovec, and Na Glavi. Čezsoča lies in the valley on the left bank of the Soča River. The terrain then rises up towards Mount Polovnik (1,480 m). East of the settlement is Humčič Hill (810 m), behind which rises Mount Javoršček (1,557 m). Oplenk Creek flows through the village between Gorenja Vas and", "id": "14920585" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nJablanica, the Neretva enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching in depth. Three hydroelectric dams operate between Jablanica and Mostar. When the Neretva expands for the second and final time, it reaches its third section. This area is often colloquially called the \"\"Bosnian and Herzegovinian California\"\". The last of its course forms wide alluvial delta, before the river empties into the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Tatinac (also known as the", "id": "12890344" }, { "contents": "Jablaničko lake\n\n\nJablaničko lake () is a large artificially formed lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva briefly expands into a wide valley. River provided lot of fertile, agricultural land there, before lake flooded most of it. The lake was created in 1953 after construction of Jablanica Dam near Jablanica in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake has an irregular elongated shape. Its width varies along its length. The lake is a popular vacation destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Swimming, boating and especially fishing are popular activities", "id": "13828307" }, { "contents": "Jablanica Dam\n\n\nThe Jablanica Dam is an arch-gravity dam on the Neretva River about northeast of Jablanica in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The dam was constructed between 1947 and 1955 with the primary purpose of hydroelectric power production. The power station was commissioned in two stages, from 1955 until 1958. The first generator was commissioned in February 1955. An upgrade in 2008 increased the installed capacity of the power station from 150 MW to 180 MW. The dam's power station is located about to the southeast near Jablanica", "id": "854706" }, { "contents": "Jablanik\n\n\nJablanik (Serbian Cyrillic: Јабланик) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Valjevo. Its highest peak \"Jablanik\" has an elevation of 1,275 meters(10001020_ above sea level. Jablanik is located at the source of the river Jablanica. It is separated from nearby Medvednik mountain by high pass Stolica, while the Debelo Brdo saddle separates it from Povlen in the southeast. The highest peak has the same name as the mountain itself - Jablanik, and is 1,275 m high. The hills around the peak are mainly", "id": "366162" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\nThe Nišava or Nishava (Bulgarian and , ) is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia, a right tributary, and with a length of 218 km also the longest one, of the South Morava. The Nišava originates in western Bulgaria, in the Stara Planina mountains (east of Kom Peak) near the village of Gintsi. Its source is close to the Serbian border. It enters Serbia after 67 km of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries. Because it flows through Gintsi, the upper course of the river is", "id": "9627075" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nAfter Mramorac village, the Jasenica spills over in several parallel flows, which continue until its confluence. After the Pridvorica and Vodice villages (on different arms of the river), the Jasenica reaches the town of Smederevska Palanka, the most populous settlement in its valley. This is also where the Kubršnica, its main tributary, flows into it from the left. The Jasenica then gently bends to the east, flowing into the Great Morava near the village of Veliko Orašje (the southern arm of the river flows through the town", "id": "3481502" }, { "contents": "Gruža (river)\n\n\nThe Gruža (Serbian Cyrillic: Гружа, ) is a river in central Serbia. The river is a 62 km long left tributary to the Zapadna Morava. The Gruža originates in the central part of the Rudnik mountain, right under the mountain's main settlement, the village of Rudnik, northeast of the town of Gornji Milanovac, central Serbia. The river flows south next to the village of Majdan, around the Rudnik mountain into the Takovo region and at the village of Nevade, just few kilometers away from Gornji Milanovac,", "id": "10971320" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\n(hamlet Panjak) on the Serbian-Bosnian border Crni Rzav meets the Jablanica river at the village Gornje Vardište and finally the river Beli Rzav at the village of Donje Vardište. The Rzav continues as the natural extension of the Beli Rzav, but since the Black Rzav is longer, the latter is considered to be the main headstream. It floes between the southernmost part of the Zvijezda mountain (\"Ponos\" peak) from the north and the Suha Gora mountain from the south, next to the villages of Prosjek (and", "id": "11540155" }, { "contents": "Ub (river)\n\n\nThe Ub (Serbian Cyrillic: Уб) is a river in western Serbia, a 57 km-long right and longest tributary to Tamnava river. The Ub originates from the Vlašić mountain in Podgorina region of west Serbia, near the village of Kasapo. From its source to the mouth, the river flows to the east, parallel to the river Tamnava, which it will eventually join. The villages located in the upper section of the river's flow are Družetić, Pambukovica and Čučuge, where the Ub slightly turns to the", "id": "2261401" }, { "contents": "Olomouc Region\n\n\nof the region is situated on the water level of the Morava River near to Kojetín in the Přerov District (190 m above sea level). The Morava river flows through the region and the majority of the region's territory belongs to Morava’s drainage basin. A small northern part of the region belongs to the drainage basin of Odra River, which flows to the Baltic Sea. The Olomouc Region offers a great variety of natural points of interest. Protected landscape area of the Jeseníky mountains offers a number of scenic places such", "id": "11419394" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina\n\n\nJablanica is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is situated on the Neretva river and Jablanica lake. The municipality of Jablanica is a major tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The municipality offer a wide variety of activities. The surrounding mountains such as Plasa, Čvrsnica and Prenj offer both hunting grounds and a variety of hiking trails. One popular hiking destination is \"Hajdučka Vrata\", a natural wonder, the product of wind", "id": "9009264" }, { "contents": "Krupá (Morava)\n\n\nKrupá (German: Graupa Bach) is a creek in Šumperk District, Moravia, left tributary of the Morava. Its length is 19,2 km and its drainage basin covers 112.7 km2. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 4.48 m³/s. The Krupá originates in Czech part of the Śnieżnik Mountains, 400 meters above sea level. The Krupá then goes south toward the town of Staré Město. It flows into the Morava river near Hanušovice town. River keeps its natural character with meanders and original riversides. A river bottom is", "id": "1745557" }, { "contents": "Oskava (river)\n\n\nOskava is a river in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic, left tributary of the Morava river. Its length is 50.3 km and its drainage basin covers 569 km. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 3.53 m/s. The Oskava originates from southeast slope of Kamenná hora in Hrubý Jeseník, 215 meters above sea level. The river is surrounded by woods in upper reaches, flows through hills of Nízký Jeseník in middle reaches and its lower reaches is situated in swampy floodplain of Litovelské Pomoraví Protected Landscape Area.", "id": "8538845" }, { "contents": "Crna Trava\n\n\nCrna Trava ( ) is a village and municipality located in the Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to 2011 census, the population of the village is 434 inhabitants, while population of the municipality is 1,663. This is the smallest by population and poorest municipality in Serbia. Crna Trava is famous for its migrant builders, who are considered the best in the region and are colloquially described as \"building half of Yugoslavia\". The name of the village in Serbian translates to \"Black Grass\". The origin of the name", "id": "18032485" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\n. At the village of Kušiljevo, the river receives the small stream of \"Beljeva\" from the left and turns northward, which is the general direction of its course for the rest of the flow. The river flows parallel to the Velika Morava river as its satellite flow, in the Morava's floodplain, so there are no settlements on the Resavica itself, but several large villages are located in its valley (Porodin, Žabari, Simićevo, Aleksandrovac Požarevački, Vlaški Do, Poljana), all of them located on the", "id": "4886223" }, { "contents": "Lugomir\n\n\nThe Lugomir (Serbian Cyrillic: Лугомир) is a river in central Serbia, a 57 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. The Lugomir originates from two headstreams, the Dulenska reka and the Županjevačka reka. The shorter headstream of Županjevačka reka (Cyrillic: \"Жупањевачка река\") originates from the mountain of Gledićke planine in southern Šumadija region of central Serbia. Its spring is just some 500 m away from the source of Lugomir's another headstream, the Dulenska reka. The river first flows to the east", "id": "5130918" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\ncities in Serbia, 10 km after which the Nišava empties into the Južna Morava. However, with the rapid growth of Niš in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs, the banks of the Nišava are urbanized almost to its mouth. After being divided into districts in 1992, the Nišava District (with Niš as administrative center) is named after the river. The river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area covers 4,086 km, of which about 73% in Serbia, the rest in Bulgaria", "id": "9627077" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nsection\" begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama river between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes a southern course and enter a largest canyons of its course, running through steep slopes of magnificent mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching 800–1200 meters in depth. From here Neretva flows toward the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Jezernica (also Tatinac), the Gornji and Donji Krupac, the Ljuta-Dindolka, the Jesenica, the Bjelimićka Rijeka, the Slatinica, the Račica, the Rakitnica, the Konjička", "id": "16797217" }, { "contents": "Resava (river)\n\n\nThe Resava (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресава) is a river in central Serbia, a 65 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava. It also gives the name to the surrounding Resava region, the Resava Monastery, the coal mines in its valley and a popular tourist destination of Resava Cave. The Resava originates from the Homolje region in eastern Serbia. It springs out at an altitude of 1,100 m and flows westward between the mountains of Beljanica (on the north) and Kučaj (on the south). In its", "id": "15040274" }, { "contents": "A1 motorway (Serbia)\n\n\nJužna Morava river. Southern section (Niš–Leskovac–Vranje–Macedonian border) consists of 128 km that are in service, while additional 26 km are under construction. Construction of southern section has been completed by May 2019, and last sections opened for traffic on 18 May 2019: Highway passes through valley of South Morava, passes west of Niš, by Merošina and Leskovac, and after Grdelica built highway ends. 26 kilometers of highway under construction passes through Grdelica gorge, very difficult terrain. This sections is often considered", "id": "1785427" }, { "contents": "Čivelj\n\n\nČivelj is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in the municipality of Jablanica, Herzegovina-Neretva Canton, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1991, the village had six inhabitants, all of whom were Muslims. In 2013, Čivelj had 10 inhabitants. Tourism is solid. Civelj is placed 8 kilometres from Jablanica and it is placed on Jablanica lake. In lake there are 5 types of fishes including the most popular \"pastrmka\". The village was found in 1911. by local fishermen. Near Civelj", "id": "4645021" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nAlthough these streams are of low outflow, there are also numerous wellsprings rising on both sides of the canyon at the river banks, with high-capacity discharge. Three large hydroelectric power stations operate in this section of the Neretva, between Jablanica and Mostar, namely Grabovica HPP, Salakovac HPP and Mostar HPP. Jablanica lake is a large artificial lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva expands into a wide valley. The river provided fertile, agricultural land before the lake flooded most of it. The lake", "id": "12890353" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nThe Jasenica (Serbian Cyrillic: Јасеница, ) is a river in central Serbia. It is long and is the left tributary of the Great Morava. This river gives the name to the surrounding region. The Jasenica originates from several streams, most notably the Đurinci (Cyrillic: Ђуринци) from Venčac mountain, and the Srebrenica (Cyrillic: Сребреница) from the northern slopes of the Rudnik mountain in central Serbia. At its origin, the river runs through the eastern border of the Kačer region. It flows to the southeast", "id": "3481500" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nin north Skopje, Macedonia. The streams Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is, after passing the Macedonian-Serbian border, known as the Binačka Morava. After 49 km it meets the Preševska Moravica at Bujanovac, and for the remainder, 246 km, flows as the South Morava. The South Morava belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and its own drainage area is 15,696 km², of which 1,237 km² is in Bulgaria (through its right tributary Nišava). Its average", "id": "15699472" }, { "contents": "Pešter\n\n\nRivers Uvac, Vapa, Jablanica and Grabovica flow through the plateau. In the geologic past, the field was a large lake, of which only a small Sjenica lake near the village of Tuzinje remained. The soil is mostly karst interspersed with pastures. Economy of the area relies primarily on cattle breeding, chiefly sheep. Pešter is famous for its dairy products, especially the \"Sjenica cheese\" (\"Sjenički sir\"), as well as lamb and prosciutto. The plateau is sparsely populated: most settlements are on the", "id": "16748290" }, { "contents": "Sredačka župa\n\n\nSredačka Župa (; \"county of Sredska\") is a remote geographical region, a valley, in southeastern Kosovo, below the Šar Mountains at the source of the Prizrenska Bistrica. The region, an oval basin, lies below the Šar Mountains, at the source, upper stream of the Prizrenska Bistrica (\"Prizren river\"). South of the region between the Prizren mountains and Koritnik mountain, lies the Gora region. It currently includes Sredska, Pousko, Jablanica, Lokvica, Rečane, Živinjane, Planjane, Nebregošte,", "id": "13372292" }, { "contents": "Binačka Morava\n\n\nBinačka Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Биначка Морава; ) or (\"Mirusha\") is a river which flows in southeastern Kosovo and North Macedonia. It flows generally in the southwest to northeast direction, from Macedonian border to Bujanovac, where, after 49 km, meets Preševska Moravica, to create South Morava. The river begins in the mountain of Skopska Crna Gora, in North Macedonia, north of its capital Skopje. Streams of Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is,", "id": "12867615" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwar, the Albanian population depending on the area reacted differently to incoming Serbian forces by either offering resistance or fleeing toward nearby mountains and Ottoman Kosovo. Although most of these Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces, a small presence was allowed to remain in the Jablanica valley where their descendants live today. Serbs from Lab moved to Serbia during and after the first round of hostilities in 1876, while incoming Albanian refugees thereafter 1878 repopulated their villages. Albanian refugees also settled alongside the north-eastern Ottoman-Serbian border, in urban areas", "id": "1099553" }, { "contents": "Banjska River\n\n\nThe Banjska River ( / \"Banjska reka\", \"Baths River\"), is a river in southern Serbia, the right tributary of Toplica in which it flows near Kuršumlija. It rises under the far south-eastern branch of Kopaonik. It is 22 km long, with a river basin area of 155 km². The average flow at the mouth is 0,7 m³/s. The valley of the river is mostly ravines, while the basin is rich in forest. The Kuršumlija-Kuršumlijska Banja-Prepolac Pass-Podujevo-", "id": "14979528" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nby a catastrophic flood. Then unregulated river Jablanica, swollen after a long rainy period, broke on June 6, spilled out of its banks and caused enormous material damage Lebane. Flood toll was paid and human victims (killed two people). After this tragic event, with financial help, Lebane begins to industrialize faster, and the process of industrialization has caused more versatile and faster development of the city. According to the 2011 census, the municipality has 22,000 inhabitants. The ethnic composition of the municipality: The following table", "id": "17523935" }, { "contents": "Čvrsnica\n\n\nČvrsnica () is a mountain in the Dinarides of Bosnia and Herzegovina, located in northern Herzegovina, most of the mountain is located in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton municipalities of Mostar and Jablanica while the smaller part of the mountain, around 10% is located in the municipality of Posušje. The highest peak (Pločno) is 2228 metres. Čvrsnica is surrounded by the river Neretva from the east (20 km), its tributaries Doljanka (18 km) from the north and Drežanka (19.8 km) from the south,", "id": "6129606" }, { "contents": "Myjava (river)\n\n\nThe Myjava River is a river in western Slovakia and for a small part in the Czech Republic and left tributary of the Morava River. It rises in the White Carpathians near the village of Nová Lhota in Moravia, but crosses the Czech-Slovak border shortly afterwards and flows in a southern direction until the town of Myjava, where it enters the Myjava Hills and turns west. Near Sobotište it flows into the Záhorie Lowland and turns south until the village of Jablonica, turning northwest and from Senica it flows west, passing through", "id": "2099838" }, { "contents": "West Morava\n\n\nSouth and Great Morava's meridian (south-to-north) flow, the West Morava runs in an opposed, latitudinal (west-to-east) direction, dividing the region of Šumadija of the central Serbia from the southern parts of the country. Due to the West Morava's direction, it flows between many mountains, regions and sub-regions: The West Morava river valley, Zapadno Pomoravlje, is economically the most developed of all three Morava river valleys. With the valley of the Ibar, the West", "id": "7786624" }, { "contents": "Ralja (river)\n\n\nThe Ralja () is a river in Šumadija region of Serbia, a 51 km long left tributary to the Jezava, a tributary of the Great Morava river. It also gives its name to the surrounding Šumadija's subregion of Ralja. The Ralja originates from the northern part of the Kosmaj mountain, north of the village of Velika Ivanča, in the Sopot municipality of the City of Belgrade. Almost from the source, the river valley is a route for the Belgrade-Niš railway. At the villages of Popović and Mali", "id": "2491229" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nBovan gorge carved by the river and is very popular local and regional tourist destination, especially among campers and fishermen, but the coastline is not put in order. The river continues to the south, in an inverse flow, and after the villages of Subotinac and Kraljevo, it empties into the Južna Morava at the town of Aleksinac. The lower section used to be a coal mining area too, just like the upper one, but the mines (Aleksinački Rudnik) are closed now. The Sokobanjska Moravica brlongs to the Black", "id": "1726358" }, { "contents": "Golijska Moravica\n\n\nThe Golijska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Голијска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in western Serbia. With a length of 98 km, it is the longer headstream of the Zapadna Morava (it forms it with the Đetinja), and thus, of the Velika Morava. Its name, Moravica, means \"little Morava\" in Serbian, and it also gives its name to the surrounding region and the modern Moravica District of Serbia. The Golijska Moravica originates from the western slopes of the Golija mountain and flows", "id": "5380325" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\n. The Nišava is not navigable. It is not only the longest tributary of the Južna Morava, but also the largest one in terms of discharge (36 km/s). It has many smaller tributaries, the most important being the Temštica from the right, and the Jerma (or Sukovska reka), Crvena reka, Koritnička reka and Kutinska reka from the left. The Nišava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia: the route follows the valleys of the Morava", "id": "9627078" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nThe Toplica (Serbian Cyrillic: Топлица, ) is a river in southern Serbia. The river is 130 km long and gives its name to the region it flows through, which constitutes most of the modern Toplica District of Serbia. The Toplica originates under the name of \"Duboka\" from the eastern slopes of the Kopaonik mountain, just south of the highest peak, Pančićev vrh. It flows to the southeast, on the western slopes of the Lepa Gora mountain, next to the villages of Merćez, Selova, Žuč,", "id": "19530451" }, { "contents": "Great Morava\n\n\nof the Velika Morava's right tributary Resava). The average discharge of the Velika Morava on its confluence with Danube is 255 m³/s (120 m³/s brought by Zapadna Morava, 100 m³/s by Južna Morava, and 35 m³/s amounted by the Velika Morava itself). Tributaries of the Velika Morava are short, the longest one being the Jasenica (79 km) and others rarely exceeding 50 km. Right tributaries are: Jovanovačka reka, Crnica, Ravanica, Resava and Resavica (or Resavčina). Left tributaries are more numerous,", "id": "2295702" }, { "contents": "Vevčani\n\n\nVevčani () is a village in the Republic of North Macedonia. It is the only settlement and seat of Vevčani Municipality. The village of Vevčani is found in the southwestern range at the foot of the Jablanica mountain range. It is situated from 800 – 950 metres above sea level. The village is located 14 km North-West of the town of Struga. The village is situated near the villages of Oktisi, Velešta, Podgorci, Gorna Belica with the Albanian border to the West of the village. The famous Vevčani", "id": "5042995" } ]
The Jablanica ( Serbian : Јабланица , ) is an river in southern Serbia . A left tributary of the South ( or Južna ) Morava river , it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia 's Jablanica District , with the region contributing about one third of the district 's area . The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain , near the village of Grbavce , on the administrative border of the Kosovo province . The area is rich in thermal springs , so several spas are located near the river : Stara Banja , Ravna Banja and Sijarina with popular Sijarinska Banja . At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary Čokotinska reka ( Cyrillic : Чокотинска река ) , turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point . The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the and Radan mountains , in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the in Kosovo . The river flows eastward , passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo , before reaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac , part of the depression of Leskovac , which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava . In the region , near Lebane , a famed archeological find of ( Iustiniana Prima ) is located . The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo , Vranovce , Bošnjace , Turekovac and Stopanje , reaches [START_ENT] Vinarce [END_ENT] , the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac , and turns north . First it flows parallel to the Veternica river , to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje , then parallel to the Južna Morava . After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava . From Pečenjevce , a parallel flow ( canal ) begins , connecting the Jablanica and s , some 15 km to the north . Through Južna Morava , the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin , draining an area of 895 km ² itself . It 's not navigable and has an average discharge of 6 m ³ / s , which in rainy years grows much higher , so the river floods its valley causing lots of material damage . The name of the river , Jablanica , in Serbian means the
ac5fb3db-7014-4f32-81c9-713e02f5e31b_river:12
[{"answer": "Vinarce", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "27394299", "title": "Vinarce"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nreaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac, part of the depression of Leskovac, which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. In the region, near Lebane, a famed archeological find of Caričin grad (\"Iustiniana Prima\") is located. The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo, Vranovce, Bošnjace, Turekovac and Stopanje, reaches Vinarce, the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac", "id": "3481303" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\n, and turns north. First it flows parallel to the Veternica river, to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje, then parallel to the Južna Morava. After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava. From Pečenjevce, a parallel flow (canal) begins, connecting the Jablanica and Toplica rivers, some 15 km to the north. Through Južna Morava, the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, draining an area of itself. It's not navigable", "id": "3481304" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\npopular Sijarinska Banja. At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary \"Čokotinska reka\" (Cyrillic: \"Чокотинска река\"), turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point. The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the Majdan and Radan mountains, in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the District of Priština in Kosovo. The river flows eastward, passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo, before", "id": "3481302" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nThe Jablanica (, ) is an river in southern Serbia. A left tributary of the South (or Južna) Morava river, it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia's Jablanica District, with the region contributing about one third of the district's area. The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain, near the village of Grbavce, on the border with Kosovo. The area is rich in thermal springs, so several spas are located near the river: Stara Banja, Ravna Banja and Sijarina with", "id": "3481301" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nJablanica with third parallel flow, the \"Sušica\", being formed in between. Settlements include many small villages, like Vina, Bukova Gora, Miroševce, Žabljane, Beli Potok and Strojkovce. In the Leskovac field, the river gently turns north, receives the Sušica from the left and reaches the town of Leskovac. The Veternica continues northward, being connected to the Jablanica river by the canal at the village of Bogojevce, before it empties into the Južna Morava. The Veternica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its", "id": "11539775" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nThe Veternica (Serbian Cyrillic: Ветерница, ) is a river in southern Serbia, a 75 km long left tributary to the Južna Morava, which gives the name to the region surrounding its valley. The Veternica originates from the Grot peak, the southernmost part of the Kukavica mountain. Four smaller streams meet at the village of Vlase and continue to the north as the Veternica. The river flows next to the villages of Golemo Selo, Oštra Glava and Gagince, where it flows parallel to the Jablanica river. As the Veternica", "id": "11539773" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nbends to the northeast, it enters the low Veternica region, part of the Leskovac field in the composite valley of the Južna Morava. Small region, located between the Kukavica mountain on the south and the Jablanica region on the north, is divided in two micro-regions, upper one being centered on the small town of Vučje (which is not located on the river itself) while the center of the lower micro-region is the town of Leskovac. As it enters the region, the Veternica furthers away from the", "id": "11539774" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nthe west, Kukavica and Čemernik in the south and Babička Gora, Seličevica and Suva Planina to the east. The largest river in the region of Leskovac is the South Morava River, which flows south to north. Tributaries of the South Morava are: the Vlasina river, which collects water from Lake Vlasina and flows through Crna Trava and Vlasotince; the Veternica river, which flows through Leskovac; the Jablanica river, which springs from the foot of Goljak and flows through Medveđa and Lebane; the Pusta (Deserted) river,", "id": "2857704" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nof 590 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and is not navigable. The region of Pusta Reka mostly correspondence with the river's watershed. It is located between the Pasjača mountain and lower Toplica region (on the north), the Southern Pomoravlje (Field of Leskovac, on the east), the Jablanica region (on the south) and the Radan mountain (on the west). The region is an agricultural area, almost without any industry, except for some smaller facilities in regional center, Bojnik", "id": "12523581" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nof Podina, Voljčince, Badnjevac and the smaller regional center Žitorađa. After the Toplica reaches municipal center of Doljevac, it enters the most densely populated part of the south Pomoravlje, turns north and flows into the Južna Morava at the village of Orljane, across the medieval ruins of Kurvin grad, as Južna Morava's longest left tributary. The Toplica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its own drainage area of 2,217 km². The river is not navigable. The river valley is a major traffic route in southern Serbia as", "id": "19530454" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nThe Sokobanjska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Сокобањска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in central eastern Serbia, a 58 km-long right tributary to the Južna Morava river. The Sokobanjska Moravica originates from the eastern slopes of the Devica mountain, near the village of Skrobnica. The river flows to the north, turns westward at the village of Levovik and enters the Banja region. The rivers flows between the northern slopes of the Devica and Ozren mountains (on the south) and southern slopes of the Rtanj mountain", "id": "1726356" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\nmouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. As the wider Jabllanica region, Medveđa also had an Albanian majority. These Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces in a way that today would be characterized as ethnic cleansing. Due to depopulation and economic considerations some small numbers of Albanians were allowed to stay and return though not to their previous settlements and instead were designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of", "id": "7117787" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\n, a notable Muslim population existed in the districts of Niš, Pirot, Vranje, Leskovac, Prokuplje and Kuršumlija. The rural parts of Toplica, Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the", "id": "1099558" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nthe southernmost slopes of the Suva Planina and Babička Gora mountains, it reaches the town of Vlasotince and western parts of the low Leskovac field, part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. After the villages of Batulovce and Stajkovce, the Vlasina empties into the Južna Morava, east of the Leskovac's eastern suburb of Mrštane. The Vlasina drains an area of 991 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin and it is not navigable. On 26 June 1988, after a period of heavy rains, Vlasina was a", "id": "14981332" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nThe Pusta River ( / \"Pusta reka\", \"Desolate River\") is a river in southern Serbia, a 71-km long left tributary to the South Morava. It also gives the name to the Pusta Reka region in its valley. The river originates northeast of Prolom Banja, near the Sokolovica village, on the northern tip of the Radan mountain, as the \"Golema River\" (\"Big River\"). It flows eastward, between the mountains of Radan (to the south) and Pasjača (to the", "id": "12523579" }, { "contents": "Persecution of Muslims during Ottoman contraction\n\n\nReka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the Turks were of Albanian origin. The Muslims in the cities of Niš and Pirot were Turkish-speaking; Vranje and Leskovac were Turkish- and Albanian-speaking; Prokuplje", "id": "8891598" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nvalley between Konjic and Jablanica, known simply as \"Neretva\" since Middle Ages, the new point for hydrographical division became dam of the Jablanica HPP where also is a place of confluence of the rivers Neretva and Rama. Here the Neretva river suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before it reach town of Jablanica. From this point it turns again toward south and enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes of the mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica", "id": "12890350" }, { "contents": "Rama (Neretva)\n\n\nRama is a river in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a major tributary of the Neretva. It joins it from the right by discharging into Neretva's artificial reservoir, Jablaničko lake, at place called Marina Pećina, near village of Gračac, between location of underground powerhouse of Rama Hydroelectric Power Station and Jablanica Dam, depending on water level in Jablaničko lake, some 15 kilometers upstream from Jablanica. The Rama flows through municipalities of Prozor-Rama and Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, while its headwaters together with wellsprings in the region of", "id": "3052779" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\nThe Kolubara (Serbian Cyrillic: Колубара, ), is a long river in western Serbia; it is an eastern, right tributary to the Sava river. Kolubara is formed by the two small rivers Obnica and Jablanica. \"Obnica\" is the river in Western Serbia that springs at the foot of the mountain Medvednik. It flows to the East, through the villages of Suvodanje, Bobova, Majinović, Pričević and Zlatarić, and at the city of Valjevo meets the river \"Jablanica\" and forms Kolubara. The Obnica is", "id": "20109582" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\ndating to the 4th century AD lay at various locations of the town, as it was a transitory zone of Upper Moesia; travel and postal stations are among the finds. Toponyms such as \"Arbanaška\" and \"Đjake\" shows an Albanian presence in the Toplica and Southern Morava regions (located north-east of contemporary Kosovo) before the expulsion of Albanians during 1877–1878 period. The rural parts of Jablanica valley and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river", "id": "7117786" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\naverage elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva again expands into a third and largest valley which provided fertile agricultural land before it was flooded by large artificial reservoir, Jablaničko Lake, formed after construction of a Jablanica Dam near town of Jablanica. The second section begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before reaches town of Jablanica, from which point turns again toward south. From", "id": "12890343" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nLebane () is a town and municipality located in Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 10,062 inhabitants, while the municipality has 20,000 inhabitants. The town is located at the confluence of the rivers Jablanica and Šumanska Reka, in the alluvial plain created by the former. Just northeast of the town a larger plain called Leskovačko polje extends toward the town of Leskovac, which is the district seat. The elevation of the town of Lebane is between 275.2 and 420 MASL.", "id": "17523929" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nRakic writes about it as a \"\"big village populated by Serbs, in a valley, on the river Jablanica, on its left bank.\"\" Only when Lebane got the role of Jablanica district headquarters, it began to gradually develop in a direction of a small town. The core of this small town was a series of houses along the Jablanica which is 45m wide here (as is even now); at the end of this series are the buildings of the Court and Municipality. The main feature of", "id": "17523931" }, { "contents": "Štulac (Lebane)\n\n\nthe village of Prekopčelica. The village is located on the valley slopes of the Caričin Potok creek. It is scattered between the altitudes of . It is situated in the wider Pusta Reka region. The village rests on the western slopes of the , which here divides the regions of Pusta Reka and Jablanica. On the west, the easternmost slopes of the Radan mountain begin. The village area covers . The Slavs settled in the area in the 7th century, centering around the ruins of Iustiniana Prima. Due to the lack of", "id": "11151840" }, { "contents": "Grdelica\n\n\nGrdelica () is a town in southern Serbia. It is situated in the Leskovac municipality, in the Jablanica District. The total population of the town was 3,194 people as of the 2011 census. For census purposes, Grdelica is divided into two adjacent parts, southern \"Grdelica town\" (\"Grdelica varoš\"; population 2,136) and northern \"Grdelica village\" (\"Grdelica selo\"; 1,058). Grdelica lies at the South Morava river, on the mountainous terrain at the entrance of the Grdelica Gorge. It", "id": "460756" }, { "contents": "Gornji Bučumet\n\n\nall settlements registered separately in the census. The three settlements lie in the South Morava basin, above the Jablanica river, and as such are located in the Upper Jablanica region. The highest mountain in Upper Bučumet is Paramid (853), with the mountain of Sv. Petar (1149) being located in Middle Bučumet. The three neighbourhoods of Bučumet are 470 to 853 metres above sea level. There is a medieval church built on the ruins of an older church. During the Toplica-Jablanica Operation (, ) in", "id": "12752738" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nthe huge floods of its daughter river. The South Morava has 157 tributaries. The most important left tributaries are: Jablanica, Veternica, Pusta reka and Toplica. Right tributaries are: Vrla, Vlasina, Nišava (the longest) and Sokobanjska Moravica. The South Morava has a significant potential for electricity production, and a huge hydroelectrical system (Vlasina- Vrla I-IV power stations) has been constructed in its drainage basin. To a certain extent, its waters are used for irrigation. The river valley's most important role", "id": "15699476" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nThe Rasina () is a river in south central Serbia. The long river flows through the Rasina region, gives its name to the modern Rasina District of Serbia, and flows into the Zapadna Morava near the city of Kruševac. Its historical name is Arsen (Αρσεγα). The Rasina springs from the southern slopes of the Goč mountain, near the village of Rašovka, southwest of the most famous Serbian spa, Vrnjačka Banja. The river originally flows to the southeast, around the mountains of Željin and Kopaonik, next to", "id": "209716" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nLeskovac (Serbian Cyrillic: Лесковац, ) is a city and the administrative center of the Jablanica District in southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the city urban area has 60,288 inhabitants, while the city administrative area has 144,206. Traces of life of the Brnjica culture (8th century BC) is seen at the Hisar Hill (Hisar Leskovac) that was protected by a deep moat with a palisade on its inner side, a fortification similar to that of another fortification on the site near Zlokućane in the Velika Morava basin", "id": "2857693" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nThe favorable location and the richness of nature made Jablanica valley important place since the earliest times. Traffic affordable and fertile, Leskovac valley has provided favorable conditions for the settlement of population. Archaeological findings, of which the most important are Hissar and Caričin grad (Iustiniana Prima) show that life in this area, continuously evolved from prehistoric man to date. First mention of Lebane as Hlebane dates back to 1512. Lebane is formed as a village of the same name after the liberation in 1878. Visiting Serbia in 1880s, M.", "id": "17523930" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nThe South Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Јужна Морава, Serbian Latin: \"Južna Morava\", ; ) is a river in eastern Kosovo and in southern Serbia, which represents the shorter headwater of Great Morava. Today, it is 295 km long, including its source river Binačka Morava. It flows generally in the south to north direction, from Macedonian border to Kosovo and onwards to Central Serbia, where it meets West Morava at Stalać, to create Great Morava. The river rises in the Skopska Crna Gora mountain", "id": "15699471" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\nis the Rzav's longer headstream. It originates from the Čigota mountain, eastern section of the Zlatibor mountain. The river originally flows northward, next to the villages of Vodice and Jokina Ćuprija, reaches the central section of the Zlatibor where it is dammed and creates the artificial Ribnica lake (surface area of 10 km²), after the nearby village of Ribnica. After the lake, the river sharply turns west and soon gets followed by the parallel stream of the \"Jablanica\" river. After crossing the village of Mokra Gora", "id": "11540154" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\n25 km long. Jablanica originates on the eastern slopes of the Jablanik mountain, just few kilometers away from Obnica. It curves around Parač mountain and next to the village of Balinović, before it meets Obnica in Valjevo. Jablanica is 21.5 km long. This is also the beginning of the long region of the Kolubara valley, divided in two large parts, referred to as Upper (\"gornja\") Kolubara and Lower (\"donja\") Kolubara (around the Belgrade's suburb of Obrenovac). At Valjevo, the", "id": "20109583" }, { "contents": "Jablanica District\n\n\nThe Jablanica District (, ) is one of nine administrative districts of Southern and Eastern Serbia. It expands in the south-eastern parts of Serbia. According to the 2011 census results, it has a population of 215,463 inhabitants. The administrative center of the district is the city of Leskovac. The district encompasses the municipalities of: According to the 2011 census results, the Jablanica Distract has a total population of 216,304 inhabitants. Ethnic composition of the Jablanica District: Famous cultural-historic monuments in this District are: the Roman", "id": "13223854" }, { "contents": "Kalna, Crna Trava\n\n\nKalna () is a small village in the Crna Trava municipality of the Jablanica District of Serbia. Kalna village is an old Serbian village, 35 km away from the Crna Trava. It is located between Tumba and Serbian-Bulgarian border, at an altitude of 500 to 1100 m. The total area is rural area of 7285 hectares. The Kalna can be reached from three directions: The road in this way was there since the Turkish rule. It was the shortest connection of Leskovac valley (Dubočica) to Sofia and Constantinople", "id": "11211518" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina-Neretva Canton\n\n\ntook place there during World War II and there is a large museum in Jablanica dedicated to these battles. The Neretva river runs through the cities of Konjic, Jablanica, Mostar and Čapljina before it flows through Croatia and into the Adriatic Sea. There are large lakes in the canton such as the Jablanica lake located around the city Jablanica. The southern most municipality in the canton is the Neum municipality which borders the Adriatic sea and the eastern most municipality is the Ravno municipality along the border with Croatia. Of the ten cantons comprising", "id": "3225485" }, { "contents": "Vardar Corps\n\n\nThe Vardar Corps was a corps of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland (JVuO) that operated on the left bank of the river Vardar during the World War II in Yugoslavia on the territory of modern-day North Macedonia and southern Serbia. Its commander was former Captain of the Royal Guard of the Royal Yugoslav Army Stojan Krstić. It consisted of four brigades with total number of 1,000 soldiers. Together with Jablanica Corps, South Morava Corps and Flying Corps it belonged under \"Mountain Staff 110\" () located in Sijarinska Banja", "id": "11325997" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nthe villages of Mitrovo Polje, Bzenica, Pleš, Jablanica, Grčak, Toskići, Budilovina and Milentija. When the Rasina reaches the small town of Brus, it enters the upper Rasina region and continues next to the villages of Tršanovci, Lepenac and Razbojna. At this point the river reaches the western side of the Veliki Jastrebac mountain, and makes a wide, elbow turn to the north. In this part of the course, the Rasina also makes a southeast border of the Aleksandrovačka Župa region. After the villages of Bogiše", "id": "209717" }, { "contents": "Doljanka\n\n\nDoljanka is a right tributary of Neretva river in North Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The length of Doljanka is around 18 km and reaches an altitude drop of about 400 m. Arises from sources scattered type under the far northeast slopes of Vran mountain on altitude of 1324 m. It runs through limestone canyon, which is high up to 1,200 m and flows through the village of Doljani. Doljanka flows into the Neretva River between Jablanica and Mostar, at an altitude of 300 m. It is also the connection over which trouts from the Neretva", "id": "8874715" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nValley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Albanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje", "id": "17667163" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n. The Neretva then flows northwest, through Konjic. It enters the Jablanica Reservoir (\"Jablaničko jezero\"), one of the largest in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake ends near the town of Jablanica. From here on, the Neretva turns southward, continuing to the Adriatic Sea. With the mountains lining its shores gradually receding, the Neretva enters a valley where the city of Mostar lies. It flows under the old bridge (\"Stari most\") and continues, now wider, toward the town of Čapljina and", "id": "3021139" }, { "contents": "Radan (mountain)\n\n\nRadan (Serbian Cyrillic: Радан) is a mountain in southern Serbia, near the town of Kuršumlija. Its highest peak, Šopot, has an elevation of 1,408 meters above sea level. Radan separates the valleys of the Toplica and Jablanica rivers. It is well covered with deciduous and evergreen forests. The best known spot on Radan is the Devil's Town – a peculiar rock formation consisting of hundreds of mushroom-like posts, located on its southern slopes. Near the Devil's Town there are ruins of Ivanova kula –", "id": "3957176" }, { "contents": "Crni Timok\n\n\nкотлина, \"depression of Crna Reka\"), populated with many smaller villages (Lukovo, Jablanica, Valakonje, Savinac, Gamzigrad, Zvezdan). At Gamzigrad there is also an important archeological site from Roman times. After a flow of 84 km, the Crni Timok reaches Zaječar, where it joins the Beli Timok River, forming the Veliki Timok River. It drains an area of . Early in its course it receives from the right the Radovanska, Suva, Velika, Salešča, Šarbanovačka, Jasenova, Bajnska and Suva", "id": "11459489" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (mountain range)\n\n\nJablanica ( ; ) is a mountain range in Southern and Southeastern Europe, stretching north-south direction across the border of Albania and the Republic of North Macedonia. The long mountain ridge is higher than for approximately , while the highest part, located in its very center, is Black Stone at high. Both countries have 50% of the mountain, Albania the west and North Macedonia the east. Jablanica Mountain contains many large mountain lakes. Shebenik mountain is located just to the west of Jablanica and give name to the Shebenik", "id": "3232652" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nThe Vlasina (Serbian Cyrillic: Власина), is a river in southeastern Serbia, a 70 km-long outflow of the Vlasina Lake and a right tributary to the Južna Morava, which also gives its name to the surrounding Vlasina region. The Vlasina flows out from the Vlasina Lake at an altitude of 1,213 m. Lake used to be a large, muddy peat bog, but in 1947-51 the Vlasina was dammed by the long, earth dam and the bog was turned into an artificial lake. The river flows to", "id": "14981330" }, { "contents": "Desná (Morava)\n\n\nDesná () is a river situated in Olomouc region of Czech republic, left tributary of the Morava. It is 43.4 km long, and its basin area is 338 km. The Desná river originates at the confluence of Hučivá Desná and Divoká Desná in Kouty nad Desnou, the village situated in deep valley of High Ash Mountains. The Desná then goes southwest through a valley toward the town of Šumperk. After approximately 43.4 km, the Desná flows into the Morava river near Postřelmov village.The mean annual discharge at its mouth", "id": "20977814" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nSerbian forces then headed south into the Morava valley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Muslims fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Turks fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Muslims departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessalonika. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in", "id": "1099566" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n, in the center of the region. Other larger towns include Trebinje, Stolac, Široki Brijeg, Posušje, Ljubuški, Grude, Konjic, and Čapljina. Borders between Herzegovina and Bosnia are unclear and often disputed. The upper flow of the Neretva River lies in northern Herzegovina, a heavily forested area with fast-flowing rivers and high mountains. Konjic and Jablanica lie in this area. The Neretva rises on Lebršnik Mountain, close to the Montenegro border, and as the river flows west, it enters Herzegovina. The entire", "id": "3021137" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nUpper Neretva, of the Neretva river from its source at 1,227 m.a.s.l. and headwaters gorge all the way to the town of Konjic is 90 km, flows from south to north - north-west as most of the Bosnia and Herzegovina rivers belonging to the Danube watershed, and cover some 1,390 km with average elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva briefly expanding into a wide valley which provides fertile agricultural land. There exists a large Jablaničko Lake, artificially formed after construction of dam near Jablanica. \"Second", "id": "16797216" }, { "contents": "Kubršnica\n\n\nThe Kubršnica (Serbian Cyrillic: Кубршница) is a river in Šumadija region of central Serbia, a 42 km-long left and the longest tributary to the Jasenica river. The Kubršnica originates from the Venčac mountain, in the Jasenica sub-region of Šumadija, in the wider area of the town of Aranđelovac. The terrain in the source area of the river is rich in marble and fireclay. The river flows to the east, next to the Aranđelovac's suburb of Banja and turns north near Topola. After the villages", "id": "5629731" }, { "contents": "Peć Bistrica\n\n\nkm-long, Rugovo glacier. The gorge is sparsely inhabited (the village of Mali Štupelj). As it comes out of the gorge, the Peć Bistrica reaches the town of Peć and enters the bottom of the Metohija depression through which it flows for the rest of its course. It runs parallel to the flows of the White Drin to the north and the Dečanska Bistrica to the south, next to the villages of Goraždevac, Lješane, Jablanica, Drenovce and Zaimovo, before it empties into the White Drin south of", "id": "15886949" }, { "contents": "Zlatibor\n\n\nsylvestris\" var. \"zlatiborica\" is a subspecies of pine originating from the mountain, and is endangered today. A hill by the name of Cigla\",\" located near the nearby village of Jablanica, still has some borderline markings of the Kingdom of Serbia, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Zlatibor itself is located in the northern part of the Stari Vlah region, a historical border region between Raška, Herzegovina and Bosnia. It spreads over an area of , in length, southeast to northwest, and up", "id": "3906304" }, { "contents": "Serbian Christmas traditions\n\n\nhousehold. The members of the group were called \"koledari\". The \"koleda\" was carried out from the Feast of Saint Ignatius Theophorus (five days before Christmas) up until the Epiphany. This custom was best preserved in the upper Pčinja District, and in the region around the River South Morava in the Jablanica District, southeastern Serbia. Regarded as pagan and discouraged by the Serbian Orthodox Church, the \"koleda\" ceased to be performed among most of the Serbs during the 19th and 20th centuries. \"Koledari\"", "id": "20573743" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwere designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of Medveđa have small numbers of Albanians and their descendants remained. This was due to a local Ottoman Albanian commander Shahid Pasha from the Jablanica area negotiating on good terms with Prince Milan and thereby guaranteeing their presence. Some other Albanians such as merchants attempted to remain in Niš, but they left after murders occurred and their property was sold off at low values. In 1879, some Albanian refugees from", "id": "1099570" }, { "contents": "Kosovo Pomoravlje\n\n\nThe region's largest cities are Gjilan and Bujanovac. The region is known as \"Kosovsko Pomoravlje\" (Косовско Поморавље, \"Morava Valley of Kosovo\") in Serbian and as Lugina e Anamoraves Binçes (\"Valley of Binač Morava\") in Albanian. Its name is derived from the Binač Morava River, which flows through northern Macedonia, eastern Kosovo and southern Serbia as part of the Great Morava river system. The region includes part of the valley and the Karadak and Koznik mountains. Gjilan has six municipalities and 287 smaller", "id": "13339352" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nAlbanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje, with the intention of then turning west and", "id": "17667142" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\nThe Resavčina (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресавчина) is a river in Serbia, a 32 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. It is sometimes also called \"Resavica\" or \"Resava\" (not to be confused with another Velika Morava's right tributary of Resava or its own tributary of Resavica). The Resavčina originates near the village of Proštinac in Svilajnac municipality. The river originally flows to the north, but soon turns west at the village of Dubnica and enters the western half of the Veliko Pomoravlje region", "id": "4886222" }, { "contents": "Ibar (river)\n\n\nThe Ibar, also known as the Ibër and Ibri (, , ), is a river that flows through eastern Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, with a total length of . The river begins in the Hajla mountain, in Rožaje, eastern Montenegro, and passes through Kosovo to flow into the West Morava river near Kraljevo, central Serbia. It belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area is , with an average discharge of 60 m³/s at the mouth. It is not navigable. The Ibar originates from", "id": "4536148" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Ilirska Bistrica\n\n\nJablanica (; ) is a settlement southeast of Ilirska Bistrica in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. Jablanica is the site of three known mass graves or unmarked graves from the end of the Second World War. They all contain the remains of German soldiers from the 97th Corps that were killed at the beginning of May 1945. The Mountain Fields Mass Grave (), also known as the Mountain Mass Grave (), lies in a meadow about 1.6 km northeast of Jablanica and contains the remains of 10 soldiers. The Solne Mass", "id": "16911511" }, { "contents": "Čezsoča\n\n\nČezsoča (; ) is a settlement in the Municipality of Bovec in the Littoral region of Slovenia. It includes the hamlets of Gorenja Vas (), Dolenja Vas (), Jablanica, Kršovec, and Na Glavi. Čezsoča lies in the valley on the left bank of the Soča River. The terrain then rises up towards Mount Polovnik (1,480 m). East of the settlement is Humčič Hill (810 m), behind which rises Mount Javoršček (1,557 m). Oplenk Creek flows through the village between Gorenja Vas and", "id": "14920585" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nJablanica, the Neretva enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching in depth. Three hydroelectric dams operate between Jablanica and Mostar. When the Neretva expands for the second and final time, it reaches its third section. This area is often colloquially called the \"\"Bosnian and Herzegovinian California\"\". The last of its course forms wide alluvial delta, before the river empties into the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Tatinac (also known as the", "id": "12890344" }, { "contents": "Jablaničko lake\n\n\nJablaničko lake () is a large artificially formed lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva briefly expands into a wide valley. River provided lot of fertile, agricultural land there, before lake flooded most of it. The lake was created in 1953 after construction of Jablanica Dam near Jablanica in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake has an irregular elongated shape. Its width varies along its length. The lake is a popular vacation destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Swimming, boating and especially fishing are popular activities", "id": "13828307" }, { "contents": "Jablanica Dam\n\n\nThe Jablanica Dam is an arch-gravity dam on the Neretva River about northeast of Jablanica in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The dam was constructed between 1947 and 1955 with the primary purpose of hydroelectric power production. The power station was commissioned in two stages, from 1955 until 1958. The first generator was commissioned in February 1955. An upgrade in 2008 increased the installed capacity of the power station from 150 MW to 180 MW. The dam's power station is located about to the southeast near Jablanica", "id": "854706" }, { "contents": "Jablanik\n\n\nJablanik (Serbian Cyrillic: Јабланик) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Valjevo. Its highest peak \"Jablanik\" has an elevation of 1,275 meters(10001020_ above sea level. Jablanik is located at the source of the river Jablanica. It is separated from nearby Medvednik mountain by high pass Stolica, while the Debelo Brdo saddle separates it from Povlen in the southeast. The highest peak has the same name as the mountain itself - Jablanik, and is 1,275 m high. The hills around the peak are mainly", "id": "366162" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\nThe Nišava or Nishava (Bulgarian and , ) is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia, a right tributary, and with a length of 218 km also the longest one, of the South Morava. The Nišava originates in western Bulgaria, in the Stara Planina mountains (east of Kom Peak) near the village of Gintsi. Its source is close to the Serbian border. It enters Serbia after 67 km of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries. Because it flows through Gintsi, the upper course of the river is", "id": "9627075" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nAfter Mramorac village, the Jasenica spills over in several parallel flows, which continue until its confluence. After the Pridvorica and Vodice villages (on different arms of the river), the Jasenica reaches the town of Smederevska Palanka, the most populous settlement in its valley. This is also where the Kubršnica, its main tributary, flows into it from the left. The Jasenica then gently bends to the east, flowing into the Great Morava near the village of Veliko Orašje (the southern arm of the river flows through the town", "id": "3481502" }, { "contents": "Gruža (river)\n\n\nThe Gruža (Serbian Cyrillic: Гружа, ) is a river in central Serbia. The river is a 62 km long left tributary to the Zapadna Morava. The Gruža originates in the central part of the Rudnik mountain, right under the mountain's main settlement, the village of Rudnik, northeast of the town of Gornji Milanovac, central Serbia. The river flows south next to the village of Majdan, around the Rudnik mountain into the Takovo region and at the village of Nevade, just few kilometers away from Gornji Milanovac,", "id": "10971320" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\n(hamlet Panjak) on the Serbian-Bosnian border Crni Rzav meets the Jablanica river at the village Gornje Vardište and finally the river Beli Rzav at the village of Donje Vardište. The Rzav continues as the natural extension of the Beli Rzav, but since the Black Rzav is longer, the latter is considered to be the main headstream. It floes between the southernmost part of the Zvijezda mountain (\"Ponos\" peak) from the north and the Suha Gora mountain from the south, next to the villages of Prosjek (and", "id": "11540155" }, { "contents": "Ub (river)\n\n\nThe Ub (Serbian Cyrillic: Уб) is a river in western Serbia, a 57 km-long right and longest tributary to Tamnava river. The Ub originates from the Vlašić mountain in Podgorina region of west Serbia, near the village of Kasapo. From its source to the mouth, the river flows to the east, parallel to the river Tamnava, which it will eventually join. The villages located in the upper section of the river's flow are Družetić, Pambukovica and Čučuge, where the Ub slightly turns to the", "id": "2261401" }, { "contents": "Olomouc Region\n\n\nof the region is situated on the water level of the Morava River near to Kojetín in the Přerov District (190 m above sea level). The Morava river flows through the region and the majority of the region's territory belongs to Morava’s drainage basin. A small northern part of the region belongs to the drainage basin of Odra River, which flows to the Baltic Sea. The Olomouc Region offers a great variety of natural points of interest. Protected landscape area of the Jeseníky mountains offers a number of scenic places such", "id": "11419394" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina\n\n\nJablanica is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is situated on the Neretva river and Jablanica lake. The municipality of Jablanica is a major tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The municipality offer a wide variety of activities. The surrounding mountains such as Plasa, Čvrsnica and Prenj offer both hunting grounds and a variety of hiking trails. One popular hiking destination is \"Hajdučka Vrata\", a natural wonder, the product of wind", "id": "9009264" }, { "contents": "Krupá (Morava)\n\n\nKrupá (German: Graupa Bach) is a creek in Šumperk District, Moravia, left tributary of the Morava. Its length is 19,2 km and its drainage basin covers 112.7 km2. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 4.48 m³/s. The Krupá originates in Czech part of the Śnieżnik Mountains, 400 meters above sea level. The Krupá then goes south toward the town of Staré Město. It flows into the Morava river near Hanušovice town. River keeps its natural character with meanders and original riversides. A river bottom is", "id": "1745557" }, { "contents": "Oskava (river)\n\n\nOskava is a river in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic, left tributary of the Morava river. Its length is 50.3 km and its drainage basin covers 569 km. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 3.53 m/s. The Oskava originates from southeast slope of Kamenná hora in Hrubý Jeseník, 215 meters above sea level. The river is surrounded by woods in upper reaches, flows through hills of Nízký Jeseník in middle reaches and its lower reaches is situated in swampy floodplain of Litovelské Pomoraví Protected Landscape Area.", "id": "8538845" }, { "contents": "Crna Trava\n\n\nCrna Trava ( ) is a village and municipality located in the Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to 2011 census, the population of the village is 434 inhabitants, while population of the municipality is 1,663. This is the smallest by population and poorest municipality in Serbia. Crna Trava is famous for its migrant builders, who are considered the best in the region and are colloquially described as \"building half of Yugoslavia\". The name of the village in Serbian translates to \"Black Grass\". The origin of the name", "id": "18032485" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\n. At the village of Kušiljevo, the river receives the small stream of \"Beljeva\" from the left and turns northward, which is the general direction of its course for the rest of the flow. The river flows parallel to the Velika Morava river as its satellite flow, in the Morava's floodplain, so there are no settlements on the Resavica itself, but several large villages are located in its valley (Porodin, Žabari, Simićevo, Aleksandrovac Požarevački, Vlaški Do, Poljana), all of them located on the", "id": "4886223" }, { "contents": "Lugomir\n\n\nThe Lugomir (Serbian Cyrillic: Лугомир) is a river in central Serbia, a 57 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. The Lugomir originates from two headstreams, the Dulenska reka and the Županjevačka reka. The shorter headstream of Županjevačka reka (Cyrillic: \"Жупањевачка река\") originates from the mountain of Gledićke planine in southern Šumadija region of central Serbia. Its spring is just some 500 m away from the source of Lugomir's another headstream, the Dulenska reka. The river first flows to the east", "id": "5130918" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\ncities in Serbia, 10 km after which the Nišava empties into the Južna Morava. However, with the rapid growth of Niš in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs, the banks of the Nišava are urbanized almost to its mouth. After being divided into districts in 1992, the Nišava District (with Niš as administrative center) is named after the river. The river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area covers 4,086 km, of which about 73% in Serbia, the rest in Bulgaria", "id": "9627077" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nsection\" begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama river between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes a southern course and enter a largest canyons of its course, running through steep slopes of magnificent mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching 800–1200 meters in depth. From here Neretva flows toward the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Jezernica (also Tatinac), the Gornji and Donji Krupac, the Ljuta-Dindolka, the Jesenica, the Bjelimićka Rijeka, the Slatinica, the Račica, the Rakitnica, the Konjička", "id": "16797217" }, { "contents": "Resava (river)\n\n\nThe Resava (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресава) is a river in central Serbia, a 65 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava. It also gives the name to the surrounding Resava region, the Resava Monastery, the coal mines in its valley and a popular tourist destination of Resava Cave. The Resava originates from the Homolje region in eastern Serbia. It springs out at an altitude of 1,100 m and flows westward between the mountains of Beljanica (on the north) and Kučaj (on the south). In its", "id": "15040274" }, { "contents": "A1 motorway (Serbia)\n\n\nJužna Morava river. Southern section (Niš–Leskovac–Vranje–Macedonian border) consists of 128 km that are in service, while additional 26 km are under construction. Construction of southern section has been completed by May 2019, and last sections opened for traffic on 18 May 2019: Highway passes through valley of South Morava, passes west of Niš, by Merošina and Leskovac, and after Grdelica built highway ends. 26 kilometers of highway under construction passes through Grdelica gorge, very difficult terrain. This sections is often considered", "id": "1785427" }, { "contents": "Čivelj\n\n\nČivelj is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in the municipality of Jablanica, Herzegovina-Neretva Canton, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1991, the village had six inhabitants, all of whom were Muslims. In 2013, Čivelj had 10 inhabitants. Tourism is solid. Civelj is placed 8 kilometres from Jablanica and it is placed on Jablanica lake. In lake there are 5 types of fishes including the most popular \"pastrmka\". The village was found in 1911. by local fishermen. Near Civelj", "id": "4645021" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nAlthough these streams are of low outflow, there are also numerous wellsprings rising on both sides of the canyon at the river banks, with high-capacity discharge. Three large hydroelectric power stations operate in this section of the Neretva, between Jablanica and Mostar, namely Grabovica HPP, Salakovac HPP and Mostar HPP. Jablanica lake is a large artificial lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva expands into a wide valley. The river provided fertile, agricultural land before the lake flooded most of it. The lake", "id": "12890353" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nThe Jasenica (Serbian Cyrillic: Јасеница, ) is a river in central Serbia. It is long and is the left tributary of the Great Morava. This river gives the name to the surrounding region. The Jasenica originates from several streams, most notably the Đurinci (Cyrillic: Ђуринци) from Venčac mountain, and the Srebrenica (Cyrillic: Сребреница) from the northern slopes of the Rudnik mountain in central Serbia. At its origin, the river runs through the eastern border of the Kačer region. It flows to the southeast", "id": "3481500" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nin north Skopje, Macedonia. The streams Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is, after passing the Macedonian-Serbian border, known as the Binačka Morava. After 49 km it meets the Preševska Moravica at Bujanovac, and for the remainder, 246 km, flows as the South Morava. The South Morava belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and its own drainage area is 15,696 km², of which 1,237 km² is in Bulgaria (through its right tributary Nišava). Its average", "id": "15699472" }, { "contents": "Pešter\n\n\nRivers Uvac, Vapa, Jablanica and Grabovica flow through the plateau. In the geologic past, the field was a large lake, of which only a small Sjenica lake near the village of Tuzinje remained. The soil is mostly karst interspersed with pastures. Economy of the area relies primarily on cattle breeding, chiefly sheep. Pešter is famous for its dairy products, especially the \"Sjenica cheese\" (\"Sjenički sir\"), as well as lamb and prosciutto. The plateau is sparsely populated: most settlements are on the", "id": "16748290" }, { "contents": "Sredačka župa\n\n\nSredačka Župa (; \"county of Sredska\") is a remote geographical region, a valley, in southeastern Kosovo, below the Šar Mountains at the source of the Prizrenska Bistrica. The region, an oval basin, lies below the Šar Mountains, at the source, upper stream of the Prizrenska Bistrica (\"Prizren river\"). South of the region between the Prizren mountains and Koritnik mountain, lies the Gora region. It currently includes Sredska, Pousko, Jablanica, Lokvica, Rečane, Živinjane, Planjane, Nebregošte,", "id": "13372292" }, { "contents": "Binačka Morava\n\n\nBinačka Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Биначка Морава; ) or (\"Mirusha\") is a river which flows in southeastern Kosovo and North Macedonia. It flows generally in the southwest to northeast direction, from Macedonian border to Bujanovac, where, after 49 km, meets Preševska Moravica, to create South Morava. The river begins in the mountain of Skopska Crna Gora, in North Macedonia, north of its capital Skopje. Streams of Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is,", "id": "12867615" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwar, the Albanian population depending on the area reacted differently to incoming Serbian forces by either offering resistance or fleeing toward nearby mountains and Ottoman Kosovo. Although most of these Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces, a small presence was allowed to remain in the Jablanica valley where their descendants live today. Serbs from Lab moved to Serbia during and after the first round of hostilities in 1876, while incoming Albanian refugees thereafter 1878 repopulated their villages. Albanian refugees also settled alongside the north-eastern Ottoman-Serbian border, in urban areas", "id": "1099553" }, { "contents": "Banjska River\n\n\nThe Banjska River ( / \"Banjska reka\", \"Baths River\"), is a river in southern Serbia, the right tributary of Toplica in which it flows near Kuršumlija. It rises under the far south-eastern branch of Kopaonik. It is 22 km long, with a river basin area of 155 km². The average flow at the mouth is 0,7 m³/s. The valley of the river is mostly ravines, while the basin is rich in forest. The Kuršumlija-Kuršumlijska Banja-Prepolac Pass-Podujevo-", "id": "14979528" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nby a catastrophic flood. Then unregulated river Jablanica, swollen after a long rainy period, broke on June 6, spilled out of its banks and caused enormous material damage Lebane. Flood toll was paid and human victims (killed two people). After this tragic event, with financial help, Lebane begins to industrialize faster, and the process of industrialization has caused more versatile and faster development of the city. According to the 2011 census, the municipality has 22,000 inhabitants. The ethnic composition of the municipality: The following table", "id": "17523935" }, { "contents": "Čvrsnica\n\n\nČvrsnica () is a mountain in the Dinarides of Bosnia and Herzegovina, located in northern Herzegovina, most of the mountain is located in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton municipalities of Mostar and Jablanica while the smaller part of the mountain, around 10% is located in the municipality of Posušje. The highest peak (Pločno) is 2228 metres. Čvrsnica is surrounded by the river Neretva from the east (20 km), its tributaries Doljanka (18 km) from the north and Drežanka (19.8 km) from the south,", "id": "6129606" }, { "contents": "Myjava (river)\n\n\nThe Myjava River is a river in western Slovakia and for a small part in the Czech Republic and left tributary of the Morava River. It rises in the White Carpathians near the village of Nová Lhota in Moravia, but crosses the Czech-Slovak border shortly afterwards and flows in a southern direction until the town of Myjava, where it enters the Myjava Hills and turns west. Near Sobotište it flows into the Záhorie Lowland and turns south until the village of Jablonica, turning northwest and from Senica it flows west, passing through", "id": "2099838" }, { "contents": "West Morava\n\n\nSouth and Great Morava's meridian (south-to-north) flow, the West Morava runs in an opposed, latitudinal (west-to-east) direction, dividing the region of Šumadija of the central Serbia from the southern parts of the country. Due to the West Morava's direction, it flows between many mountains, regions and sub-regions: The West Morava river valley, Zapadno Pomoravlje, is economically the most developed of all three Morava river valleys. With the valley of the Ibar, the West", "id": "7786624" }, { "contents": "Ralja (river)\n\n\nThe Ralja () is a river in Šumadija region of Serbia, a 51 km long left tributary to the Jezava, a tributary of the Great Morava river. It also gives its name to the surrounding Šumadija's subregion of Ralja. The Ralja originates from the northern part of the Kosmaj mountain, north of the village of Velika Ivanča, in the Sopot municipality of the City of Belgrade. Almost from the source, the river valley is a route for the Belgrade-Niš railway. At the villages of Popović and Mali", "id": "2491229" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nBovan gorge carved by the river and is very popular local and regional tourist destination, especially among campers and fishermen, but the coastline is not put in order. The river continues to the south, in an inverse flow, and after the villages of Subotinac and Kraljevo, it empties into the Južna Morava at the town of Aleksinac. The lower section used to be a coal mining area too, just like the upper one, but the mines (Aleksinački Rudnik) are closed now. The Sokobanjska Moravica brlongs to the Black", "id": "1726358" }, { "contents": "Golijska Moravica\n\n\nThe Golijska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Голијска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in western Serbia. With a length of 98 km, it is the longer headstream of the Zapadna Morava (it forms it with the Đetinja), and thus, of the Velika Morava. Its name, Moravica, means \"little Morava\" in Serbian, and it also gives its name to the surrounding region and the modern Moravica District of Serbia. The Golijska Moravica originates from the western slopes of the Golija mountain and flows", "id": "5380325" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\n. The Nišava is not navigable. It is not only the longest tributary of the Južna Morava, but also the largest one in terms of discharge (36 km/s). It has many smaller tributaries, the most important being the Temštica from the right, and the Jerma (or Sukovska reka), Crvena reka, Koritnička reka and Kutinska reka from the left. The Nišava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia: the route follows the valleys of the Morava", "id": "9627078" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nThe Toplica (Serbian Cyrillic: Топлица, ) is a river in southern Serbia. The river is 130 km long and gives its name to the region it flows through, which constitutes most of the modern Toplica District of Serbia. The Toplica originates under the name of \"Duboka\" from the eastern slopes of the Kopaonik mountain, just south of the highest peak, Pančićev vrh. It flows to the southeast, on the western slopes of the Lepa Gora mountain, next to the villages of Merćez, Selova, Žuč,", "id": "19530451" }, { "contents": "Great Morava\n\n\nof the Velika Morava's right tributary Resava). The average discharge of the Velika Morava on its confluence with Danube is 255 m³/s (120 m³/s brought by Zapadna Morava, 100 m³/s by Južna Morava, and 35 m³/s amounted by the Velika Morava itself). Tributaries of the Velika Morava are short, the longest one being the Jasenica (79 km) and others rarely exceeding 50 km. Right tributaries are: Jovanovačka reka, Crnica, Ravanica, Resava and Resavica (or Resavčina). Left tributaries are more numerous,", "id": "2295702" }, { "contents": "Vevčani\n\n\nVevčani () is a village in the Republic of North Macedonia. It is the only settlement and seat of Vevčani Municipality. The village of Vevčani is found in the southwestern range at the foot of the Jablanica mountain range. It is situated from 800 – 950 metres above sea level. The village is located 14 km North-West of the town of Struga. The village is situated near the villages of Oktisi, Velešta, Podgorci, Gorna Belica with the Albanian border to the West of the village. The famous Vevčani", "id": "5042995" } ]
The Jablanica ( Serbian : Јабланица , ) is an river in southern Serbia . A left tributary of the South ( or Južna ) Morava river , it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia 's Jablanica District , with the region contributing about one third of the district 's area . The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain , near the village of Grbavce , on the administrative border of the Kosovo province . The area is rich in thermal springs , so several spas are located near the river : Stara Banja , Ravna Banja and Sijarina with popular Sijarinska Banja . At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary Čokotinska reka ( Cyrillic : Чокотинска река ) , turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point . The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the and Radan mountains , in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the in Kosovo . The river flows eastward , passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo , before reaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac , part of the depression of Leskovac , which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava . In the region , near Lebane , a famed archeological find of ( Iustiniana Prima ) is located . The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo , Vranovce , Bošnjace , Turekovac and Stopanje , reaches Vinarce , the northern suburb of the city of [START_ENT] Leskovac [END_ENT] , and turns north . First it flows parallel to the Veternica river , to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje , then parallel to the Južna Morava . After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava . From Pečenjevce , a parallel flow ( canal ) begins , connecting the Jablanica and s , some 15 km to the north . Through Južna Morava , the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin , draining an area of 895 km ² itself . It 's not navigable and has an average discharge of 6 m ³ / s , which in rainy years grows much higher , so the river floods its valley causing lots of material damage . The name of the river , Jablanica , in Serbian means the
b357d686-f7ff-483d-aabc-1c8a21907077_river:13
[{"answer": "Leskovac", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "283915", "title": "Leskovac"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nreaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac, part of the depression of Leskovac, which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. In the region, near Lebane, a famed archeological find of Caričin grad (\"Iustiniana Prima\") is located. The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo, Vranovce, Bošnjace, Turekovac and Stopanje, reaches Vinarce, the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac", "id": "3481303" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\n, and turns north. First it flows parallel to the Veternica river, to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje, then parallel to the Južna Morava. After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava. From Pečenjevce, a parallel flow (canal) begins, connecting the Jablanica and Toplica rivers, some 15 km to the north. Through Južna Morava, the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, draining an area of itself. It's not navigable", "id": "3481304" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\npopular Sijarinska Banja. At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary \"Čokotinska reka\" (Cyrillic: \"Чокотинска река\"), turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point. The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the Majdan and Radan mountains, in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the District of Priština in Kosovo. The river flows eastward, passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo, before", "id": "3481302" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nThe Jablanica (, ) is an river in southern Serbia. A left tributary of the South (or Južna) Morava river, it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia's Jablanica District, with the region contributing about one third of the district's area. The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain, near the village of Grbavce, on the border with Kosovo. The area is rich in thermal springs, so several spas are located near the river: Stara Banja, Ravna Banja and Sijarina with", "id": "3481301" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nJablanica with third parallel flow, the \"Sušica\", being formed in between. Settlements include many small villages, like Vina, Bukova Gora, Miroševce, Žabljane, Beli Potok and Strojkovce. In the Leskovac field, the river gently turns north, receives the Sušica from the left and reaches the town of Leskovac. The Veternica continues northward, being connected to the Jablanica river by the canal at the village of Bogojevce, before it empties into the Južna Morava. The Veternica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its", "id": "11539775" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nThe Veternica (Serbian Cyrillic: Ветерница, ) is a river in southern Serbia, a 75 km long left tributary to the Južna Morava, which gives the name to the region surrounding its valley. The Veternica originates from the Grot peak, the southernmost part of the Kukavica mountain. Four smaller streams meet at the village of Vlase and continue to the north as the Veternica. The river flows next to the villages of Golemo Selo, Oštra Glava and Gagince, where it flows parallel to the Jablanica river. As the Veternica", "id": "11539773" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nbends to the northeast, it enters the low Veternica region, part of the Leskovac field in the composite valley of the Južna Morava. Small region, located between the Kukavica mountain on the south and the Jablanica region on the north, is divided in two micro-regions, upper one being centered on the small town of Vučje (which is not located on the river itself) while the center of the lower micro-region is the town of Leskovac. As it enters the region, the Veternica furthers away from the", "id": "11539774" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nthe west, Kukavica and Čemernik in the south and Babička Gora, Seličevica and Suva Planina to the east. The largest river in the region of Leskovac is the South Morava River, which flows south to north. Tributaries of the South Morava are: the Vlasina river, which collects water from Lake Vlasina and flows through Crna Trava and Vlasotince; the Veternica river, which flows through Leskovac; the Jablanica river, which springs from the foot of Goljak and flows through Medveđa and Lebane; the Pusta (Deserted) river,", "id": "2857704" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nof 590 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and is not navigable. The region of Pusta Reka mostly correspondence with the river's watershed. It is located between the Pasjača mountain and lower Toplica region (on the north), the Southern Pomoravlje (Field of Leskovac, on the east), the Jablanica region (on the south) and the Radan mountain (on the west). The region is an agricultural area, almost without any industry, except for some smaller facilities in regional center, Bojnik", "id": "12523581" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nof Podina, Voljčince, Badnjevac and the smaller regional center Žitorađa. After the Toplica reaches municipal center of Doljevac, it enters the most densely populated part of the south Pomoravlje, turns north and flows into the Južna Morava at the village of Orljane, across the medieval ruins of Kurvin grad, as Južna Morava's longest left tributary. The Toplica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its own drainage area of 2,217 km². The river is not navigable. The river valley is a major traffic route in southern Serbia as", "id": "19530454" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nThe Sokobanjska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Сокобањска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in central eastern Serbia, a 58 km-long right tributary to the Južna Morava river. The Sokobanjska Moravica originates from the eastern slopes of the Devica mountain, near the village of Skrobnica. The river flows to the north, turns westward at the village of Levovik and enters the Banja region. The rivers flows between the northern slopes of the Devica and Ozren mountains (on the south) and southern slopes of the Rtanj mountain", "id": "1726356" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\nmouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. As the wider Jabllanica region, Medveđa also had an Albanian majority. These Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces in a way that today would be characterized as ethnic cleansing. Due to depopulation and economic considerations some small numbers of Albanians were allowed to stay and return though not to their previous settlements and instead were designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of", "id": "7117787" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\n, a notable Muslim population existed in the districts of Niš, Pirot, Vranje, Leskovac, Prokuplje and Kuršumlija. The rural parts of Toplica, Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the", "id": "1099558" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nthe southernmost slopes of the Suva Planina and Babička Gora mountains, it reaches the town of Vlasotince and western parts of the low Leskovac field, part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. After the villages of Batulovce and Stajkovce, the Vlasina empties into the Južna Morava, east of the Leskovac's eastern suburb of Mrštane. The Vlasina drains an area of 991 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin and it is not navigable. On 26 June 1988, after a period of heavy rains, Vlasina was a", "id": "14981332" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nThe Pusta River ( / \"Pusta reka\", \"Desolate River\") is a river in southern Serbia, a 71-km long left tributary to the South Morava. It also gives the name to the Pusta Reka region in its valley. The river originates northeast of Prolom Banja, near the Sokolovica village, on the northern tip of the Radan mountain, as the \"Golema River\" (\"Big River\"). It flows eastward, between the mountains of Radan (to the south) and Pasjača (to the", "id": "12523579" }, { "contents": "Persecution of Muslims during Ottoman contraction\n\n\nReka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the Turks were of Albanian origin. The Muslims in the cities of Niš and Pirot were Turkish-speaking; Vranje and Leskovac were Turkish- and Albanian-speaking; Prokuplje", "id": "8891598" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nvalley between Konjic and Jablanica, known simply as \"Neretva\" since Middle Ages, the new point for hydrographical division became dam of the Jablanica HPP where also is a place of confluence of the rivers Neretva and Rama. Here the Neretva river suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before it reach town of Jablanica. From this point it turns again toward south and enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes of the mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica", "id": "12890350" }, { "contents": "Rama (Neretva)\n\n\nRama is a river in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a major tributary of the Neretva. It joins it from the right by discharging into Neretva's artificial reservoir, Jablaničko lake, at place called Marina Pećina, near village of Gračac, between location of underground powerhouse of Rama Hydroelectric Power Station and Jablanica Dam, depending on water level in Jablaničko lake, some 15 kilometers upstream from Jablanica. The Rama flows through municipalities of Prozor-Rama and Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, while its headwaters together with wellsprings in the region of", "id": "3052779" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\nThe Kolubara (Serbian Cyrillic: Колубара, ), is a long river in western Serbia; it is an eastern, right tributary to the Sava river. Kolubara is formed by the two small rivers Obnica and Jablanica. \"Obnica\" is the river in Western Serbia that springs at the foot of the mountain Medvednik. It flows to the East, through the villages of Suvodanje, Bobova, Majinović, Pričević and Zlatarić, and at the city of Valjevo meets the river \"Jablanica\" and forms Kolubara. The Obnica is", "id": "20109582" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\ndating to the 4th century AD lay at various locations of the town, as it was a transitory zone of Upper Moesia; travel and postal stations are among the finds. Toponyms such as \"Arbanaška\" and \"Đjake\" shows an Albanian presence in the Toplica and Southern Morava regions (located north-east of contemporary Kosovo) before the expulsion of Albanians during 1877–1878 period. The rural parts of Jablanica valley and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river", "id": "7117786" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\naverage elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva again expands into a third and largest valley which provided fertile agricultural land before it was flooded by large artificial reservoir, Jablaničko Lake, formed after construction of a Jablanica Dam near town of Jablanica. The second section begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before reaches town of Jablanica, from which point turns again toward south. From", "id": "12890343" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nLebane () is a town and municipality located in Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 10,062 inhabitants, while the municipality has 20,000 inhabitants. The town is located at the confluence of the rivers Jablanica and Šumanska Reka, in the alluvial plain created by the former. Just northeast of the town a larger plain called Leskovačko polje extends toward the town of Leskovac, which is the district seat. The elevation of the town of Lebane is between 275.2 and 420 MASL.", "id": "17523929" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nRakic writes about it as a \"\"big village populated by Serbs, in a valley, on the river Jablanica, on its left bank.\"\" Only when Lebane got the role of Jablanica district headquarters, it began to gradually develop in a direction of a small town. The core of this small town was a series of houses along the Jablanica which is 45m wide here (as is even now); at the end of this series are the buildings of the Court and Municipality. The main feature of", "id": "17523931" }, { "contents": "Štulac (Lebane)\n\n\nthe village of Prekopčelica. The village is located on the valley slopes of the Caričin Potok creek. It is scattered between the altitudes of . It is situated in the wider Pusta Reka region. The village rests on the western slopes of the , which here divides the regions of Pusta Reka and Jablanica. On the west, the easternmost slopes of the Radan mountain begin. The village area covers . The Slavs settled in the area in the 7th century, centering around the ruins of Iustiniana Prima. Due to the lack of", "id": "11151840" }, { "contents": "Grdelica\n\n\nGrdelica () is a town in southern Serbia. It is situated in the Leskovac municipality, in the Jablanica District. The total population of the town was 3,194 people as of the 2011 census. For census purposes, Grdelica is divided into two adjacent parts, southern \"Grdelica town\" (\"Grdelica varoš\"; population 2,136) and northern \"Grdelica village\" (\"Grdelica selo\"; 1,058). Grdelica lies at the South Morava river, on the mountainous terrain at the entrance of the Grdelica Gorge. It", "id": "460756" }, { "contents": "Gornji Bučumet\n\n\nall settlements registered separately in the census. The three settlements lie in the South Morava basin, above the Jablanica river, and as such are located in the Upper Jablanica region. The highest mountain in Upper Bučumet is Paramid (853), with the mountain of Sv. Petar (1149) being located in Middle Bučumet. The three neighbourhoods of Bučumet are 470 to 853 metres above sea level. There is a medieval church built on the ruins of an older church. During the Toplica-Jablanica Operation (, ) in", "id": "12752738" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nthe huge floods of its daughter river. The South Morava has 157 tributaries. The most important left tributaries are: Jablanica, Veternica, Pusta reka and Toplica. Right tributaries are: Vrla, Vlasina, Nišava (the longest) and Sokobanjska Moravica. The South Morava has a significant potential for electricity production, and a huge hydroelectrical system (Vlasina- Vrla I-IV power stations) has been constructed in its drainage basin. To a certain extent, its waters are used for irrigation. The river valley's most important role", "id": "15699476" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nThe Rasina () is a river in south central Serbia. The long river flows through the Rasina region, gives its name to the modern Rasina District of Serbia, and flows into the Zapadna Morava near the city of Kruševac. Its historical name is Arsen (Αρσεγα). The Rasina springs from the southern slopes of the Goč mountain, near the village of Rašovka, southwest of the most famous Serbian spa, Vrnjačka Banja. The river originally flows to the southeast, around the mountains of Željin and Kopaonik, next to", "id": "209716" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nLeskovac (Serbian Cyrillic: Лесковац, ) is a city and the administrative center of the Jablanica District in southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the city urban area has 60,288 inhabitants, while the city administrative area has 144,206. Traces of life of the Brnjica culture (8th century BC) is seen at the Hisar Hill (Hisar Leskovac) that was protected by a deep moat with a palisade on its inner side, a fortification similar to that of another fortification on the site near Zlokućane in the Velika Morava basin", "id": "2857693" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nThe favorable location and the richness of nature made Jablanica valley important place since the earliest times. Traffic affordable and fertile, Leskovac valley has provided favorable conditions for the settlement of population. Archaeological findings, of which the most important are Hissar and Caričin grad (Iustiniana Prima) show that life in this area, continuously evolved from prehistoric man to date. First mention of Lebane as Hlebane dates back to 1512. Lebane is formed as a village of the same name after the liberation in 1878. Visiting Serbia in 1880s, M.", "id": "17523930" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nThe South Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Јужна Морава, Serbian Latin: \"Južna Morava\", ; ) is a river in eastern Kosovo and in southern Serbia, which represents the shorter headwater of Great Morava. Today, it is 295 km long, including its source river Binačka Morava. It flows generally in the south to north direction, from Macedonian border to Kosovo and onwards to Central Serbia, where it meets West Morava at Stalać, to create Great Morava. The river rises in the Skopska Crna Gora mountain", "id": "15699471" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\nis the Rzav's longer headstream. It originates from the Čigota mountain, eastern section of the Zlatibor mountain. The river originally flows northward, next to the villages of Vodice and Jokina Ćuprija, reaches the central section of the Zlatibor where it is dammed and creates the artificial Ribnica lake (surface area of 10 km²), after the nearby village of Ribnica. After the lake, the river sharply turns west and soon gets followed by the parallel stream of the \"Jablanica\" river. After crossing the village of Mokra Gora", "id": "11540154" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\n25 km long. Jablanica originates on the eastern slopes of the Jablanik mountain, just few kilometers away from Obnica. It curves around Parač mountain and next to the village of Balinović, before it meets Obnica in Valjevo. Jablanica is 21.5 km long. This is also the beginning of the long region of the Kolubara valley, divided in two large parts, referred to as Upper (\"gornja\") Kolubara and Lower (\"donja\") Kolubara (around the Belgrade's suburb of Obrenovac). At Valjevo, the", "id": "20109583" }, { "contents": "Jablanica District\n\n\nThe Jablanica District (, ) is one of nine administrative districts of Southern and Eastern Serbia. It expands in the south-eastern parts of Serbia. According to the 2011 census results, it has a population of 215,463 inhabitants. The administrative center of the district is the city of Leskovac. The district encompasses the municipalities of: According to the 2011 census results, the Jablanica Distract has a total population of 216,304 inhabitants. Ethnic composition of the Jablanica District: Famous cultural-historic monuments in this District are: the Roman", "id": "13223854" }, { "contents": "Kalna, Crna Trava\n\n\nKalna () is a small village in the Crna Trava municipality of the Jablanica District of Serbia. Kalna village is an old Serbian village, 35 km away from the Crna Trava. It is located between Tumba and Serbian-Bulgarian border, at an altitude of 500 to 1100 m. The total area is rural area of 7285 hectares. The Kalna can be reached from three directions: The road in this way was there since the Turkish rule. It was the shortest connection of Leskovac valley (Dubočica) to Sofia and Constantinople", "id": "11211518" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina-Neretva Canton\n\n\ntook place there during World War II and there is a large museum in Jablanica dedicated to these battles. The Neretva river runs through the cities of Konjic, Jablanica, Mostar and Čapljina before it flows through Croatia and into the Adriatic Sea. There are large lakes in the canton such as the Jablanica lake located around the city Jablanica. The southern most municipality in the canton is the Neum municipality which borders the Adriatic sea and the eastern most municipality is the Ravno municipality along the border with Croatia. Of the ten cantons comprising", "id": "3225485" }, { "contents": "Vardar Corps\n\n\nThe Vardar Corps was a corps of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland (JVuO) that operated on the left bank of the river Vardar during the World War II in Yugoslavia on the territory of modern-day North Macedonia and southern Serbia. Its commander was former Captain of the Royal Guard of the Royal Yugoslav Army Stojan Krstić. It consisted of four brigades with total number of 1,000 soldiers. Together with Jablanica Corps, South Morava Corps and Flying Corps it belonged under \"Mountain Staff 110\" () located in Sijarinska Banja", "id": "11325997" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nthe villages of Mitrovo Polje, Bzenica, Pleš, Jablanica, Grčak, Toskići, Budilovina and Milentija. When the Rasina reaches the small town of Brus, it enters the upper Rasina region and continues next to the villages of Tršanovci, Lepenac and Razbojna. At this point the river reaches the western side of the Veliki Jastrebac mountain, and makes a wide, elbow turn to the north. In this part of the course, the Rasina also makes a southeast border of the Aleksandrovačka Župa region. After the villages of Bogiše", "id": "209717" }, { "contents": "Doljanka\n\n\nDoljanka is a right tributary of Neretva river in North Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The length of Doljanka is around 18 km and reaches an altitude drop of about 400 m. Arises from sources scattered type under the far northeast slopes of Vran mountain on altitude of 1324 m. It runs through limestone canyon, which is high up to 1,200 m and flows through the village of Doljani. Doljanka flows into the Neretva River between Jablanica and Mostar, at an altitude of 300 m. It is also the connection over which trouts from the Neretva", "id": "8874715" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nValley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Albanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje", "id": "17667163" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n. The Neretva then flows northwest, through Konjic. It enters the Jablanica Reservoir (\"Jablaničko jezero\"), one of the largest in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake ends near the town of Jablanica. From here on, the Neretva turns southward, continuing to the Adriatic Sea. With the mountains lining its shores gradually receding, the Neretva enters a valley where the city of Mostar lies. It flows under the old bridge (\"Stari most\") and continues, now wider, toward the town of Čapljina and", "id": "3021139" }, { "contents": "Radan (mountain)\n\n\nRadan (Serbian Cyrillic: Радан) is a mountain in southern Serbia, near the town of Kuršumlija. Its highest peak, Šopot, has an elevation of 1,408 meters above sea level. Radan separates the valleys of the Toplica and Jablanica rivers. It is well covered with deciduous and evergreen forests. The best known spot on Radan is the Devil's Town – a peculiar rock formation consisting of hundreds of mushroom-like posts, located on its southern slopes. Near the Devil's Town there are ruins of Ivanova kula –", "id": "3957176" }, { "contents": "Crni Timok\n\n\nкотлина, \"depression of Crna Reka\"), populated with many smaller villages (Lukovo, Jablanica, Valakonje, Savinac, Gamzigrad, Zvezdan). At Gamzigrad there is also an important archeological site from Roman times. After a flow of 84 km, the Crni Timok reaches Zaječar, where it joins the Beli Timok River, forming the Veliki Timok River. It drains an area of . Early in its course it receives from the right the Radovanska, Suva, Velika, Salešča, Šarbanovačka, Jasenova, Bajnska and Suva", "id": "11459489" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (mountain range)\n\n\nJablanica ( ; ) is a mountain range in Southern and Southeastern Europe, stretching north-south direction across the border of Albania and the Republic of North Macedonia. The long mountain ridge is higher than for approximately , while the highest part, located in its very center, is Black Stone at high. Both countries have 50% of the mountain, Albania the west and North Macedonia the east. Jablanica Mountain contains many large mountain lakes. Shebenik mountain is located just to the west of Jablanica and give name to the Shebenik", "id": "3232652" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nThe Vlasina (Serbian Cyrillic: Власина), is a river in southeastern Serbia, a 70 km-long outflow of the Vlasina Lake and a right tributary to the Južna Morava, which also gives its name to the surrounding Vlasina region. The Vlasina flows out from the Vlasina Lake at an altitude of 1,213 m. Lake used to be a large, muddy peat bog, but in 1947-51 the Vlasina was dammed by the long, earth dam and the bog was turned into an artificial lake. The river flows to", "id": "14981330" }, { "contents": "Desná (Morava)\n\n\nDesná () is a river situated in Olomouc region of Czech republic, left tributary of the Morava. It is 43.4 km long, and its basin area is 338 km. The Desná river originates at the confluence of Hučivá Desná and Divoká Desná in Kouty nad Desnou, the village situated in deep valley of High Ash Mountains. The Desná then goes southwest through a valley toward the town of Šumperk. After approximately 43.4 km, the Desná flows into the Morava river near Postřelmov village.The mean annual discharge at its mouth", "id": "20977814" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nSerbian forces then headed south into the Morava valley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Muslims fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Turks fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Muslims departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessalonika. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in", "id": "1099566" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n, in the center of the region. Other larger towns include Trebinje, Stolac, Široki Brijeg, Posušje, Ljubuški, Grude, Konjic, and Čapljina. Borders between Herzegovina and Bosnia are unclear and often disputed. The upper flow of the Neretva River lies in northern Herzegovina, a heavily forested area with fast-flowing rivers and high mountains. Konjic and Jablanica lie in this area. The Neretva rises on Lebršnik Mountain, close to the Montenegro border, and as the river flows west, it enters Herzegovina. The entire", "id": "3021137" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nUpper Neretva, of the Neretva river from its source at 1,227 m.a.s.l. and headwaters gorge all the way to the town of Konjic is 90 km, flows from south to north - north-west as most of the Bosnia and Herzegovina rivers belonging to the Danube watershed, and cover some 1,390 km with average elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva briefly expanding into a wide valley which provides fertile agricultural land. There exists a large Jablaničko Lake, artificially formed after construction of dam near Jablanica. \"Second", "id": "16797216" }, { "contents": "Kubršnica\n\n\nThe Kubršnica (Serbian Cyrillic: Кубршница) is a river in Šumadija region of central Serbia, a 42 km-long left and the longest tributary to the Jasenica river. The Kubršnica originates from the Venčac mountain, in the Jasenica sub-region of Šumadija, in the wider area of the town of Aranđelovac. The terrain in the source area of the river is rich in marble and fireclay. The river flows to the east, next to the Aranđelovac's suburb of Banja and turns north near Topola. After the villages", "id": "5629731" }, { "contents": "Peć Bistrica\n\n\nkm-long, Rugovo glacier. The gorge is sparsely inhabited (the village of Mali Štupelj). As it comes out of the gorge, the Peć Bistrica reaches the town of Peć and enters the bottom of the Metohija depression through which it flows for the rest of its course. It runs parallel to the flows of the White Drin to the north and the Dečanska Bistrica to the south, next to the villages of Goraždevac, Lješane, Jablanica, Drenovce and Zaimovo, before it empties into the White Drin south of", "id": "15886949" }, { "contents": "Zlatibor\n\n\nsylvestris\" var. \"zlatiborica\" is a subspecies of pine originating from the mountain, and is endangered today. A hill by the name of Cigla\",\" located near the nearby village of Jablanica, still has some borderline markings of the Kingdom of Serbia, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Zlatibor itself is located in the northern part of the Stari Vlah region, a historical border region between Raška, Herzegovina and Bosnia. It spreads over an area of , in length, southeast to northwest, and up", "id": "3906304" }, { "contents": "Serbian Christmas traditions\n\n\nhousehold. The members of the group were called \"koledari\". The \"koleda\" was carried out from the Feast of Saint Ignatius Theophorus (five days before Christmas) up until the Epiphany. This custom was best preserved in the upper Pčinja District, and in the region around the River South Morava in the Jablanica District, southeastern Serbia. Regarded as pagan and discouraged by the Serbian Orthodox Church, the \"koleda\" ceased to be performed among most of the Serbs during the 19th and 20th centuries. \"Koledari\"", "id": "20573743" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwere designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of Medveđa have small numbers of Albanians and their descendants remained. This was due to a local Ottoman Albanian commander Shahid Pasha from the Jablanica area negotiating on good terms with Prince Milan and thereby guaranteeing their presence. Some other Albanians such as merchants attempted to remain in Niš, but they left after murders occurred and their property was sold off at low values. In 1879, some Albanian refugees from", "id": "1099570" }, { "contents": "Kosovo Pomoravlje\n\n\nThe region's largest cities are Gjilan and Bujanovac. The region is known as \"Kosovsko Pomoravlje\" (Косовско Поморавље, \"Morava Valley of Kosovo\") in Serbian and as Lugina e Anamoraves Binçes (\"Valley of Binač Morava\") in Albanian. Its name is derived from the Binač Morava River, which flows through northern Macedonia, eastern Kosovo and southern Serbia as part of the Great Morava river system. The region includes part of the valley and the Karadak and Koznik mountains. Gjilan has six municipalities and 287 smaller", "id": "13339352" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nAlbanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje, with the intention of then turning west and", "id": "17667142" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\nThe Resavčina (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресавчина) is a river in Serbia, a 32 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. It is sometimes also called \"Resavica\" or \"Resava\" (not to be confused with another Velika Morava's right tributary of Resava or its own tributary of Resavica). The Resavčina originates near the village of Proštinac in Svilajnac municipality. The river originally flows to the north, but soon turns west at the village of Dubnica and enters the western half of the Veliko Pomoravlje region", "id": "4886222" }, { "contents": "Ibar (river)\n\n\nThe Ibar, also known as the Ibër and Ibri (, , ), is a river that flows through eastern Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, with a total length of . The river begins in the Hajla mountain, in Rožaje, eastern Montenegro, and passes through Kosovo to flow into the West Morava river near Kraljevo, central Serbia. It belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area is , with an average discharge of 60 m³/s at the mouth. It is not navigable. The Ibar originates from", "id": "4536148" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Ilirska Bistrica\n\n\nJablanica (; ) is a settlement southeast of Ilirska Bistrica in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. Jablanica is the site of three known mass graves or unmarked graves from the end of the Second World War. They all contain the remains of German soldiers from the 97th Corps that were killed at the beginning of May 1945. The Mountain Fields Mass Grave (), also known as the Mountain Mass Grave (), lies in a meadow about 1.6 km northeast of Jablanica and contains the remains of 10 soldiers. The Solne Mass", "id": "16911511" }, { "contents": "Čezsoča\n\n\nČezsoča (; ) is a settlement in the Municipality of Bovec in the Littoral region of Slovenia. It includes the hamlets of Gorenja Vas (), Dolenja Vas (), Jablanica, Kršovec, and Na Glavi. Čezsoča lies in the valley on the left bank of the Soča River. The terrain then rises up towards Mount Polovnik (1,480 m). East of the settlement is Humčič Hill (810 m), behind which rises Mount Javoršček (1,557 m). Oplenk Creek flows through the village between Gorenja Vas and", "id": "14920585" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nJablanica, the Neretva enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching in depth. Three hydroelectric dams operate between Jablanica and Mostar. When the Neretva expands for the second and final time, it reaches its third section. This area is often colloquially called the \"\"Bosnian and Herzegovinian California\"\". The last of its course forms wide alluvial delta, before the river empties into the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Tatinac (also known as the", "id": "12890344" }, { "contents": "Jablaničko lake\n\n\nJablaničko lake () is a large artificially formed lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva briefly expands into a wide valley. River provided lot of fertile, agricultural land there, before lake flooded most of it. The lake was created in 1953 after construction of Jablanica Dam near Jablanica in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake has an irregular elongated shape. Its width varies along its length. The lake is a popular vacation destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Swimming, boating and especially fishing are popular activities", "id": "13828307" }, { "contents": "Jablanica Dam\n\n\nThe Jablanica Dam is an arch-gravity dam on the Neretva River about northeast of Jablanica in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The dam was constructed between 1947 and 1955 with the primary purpose of hydroelectric power production. The power station was commissioned in two stages, from 1955 until 1958. The first generator was commissioned in February 1955. An upgrade in 2008 increased the installed capacity of the power station from 150 MW to 180 MW. The dam's power station is located about to the southeast near Jablanica", "id": "854706" }, { "contents": "Jablanik\n\n\nJablanik (Serbian Cyrillic: Јабланик) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Valjevo. Its highest peak \"Jablanik\" has an elevation of 1,275 meters(10001020_ above sea level. Jablanik is located at the source of the river Jablanica. It is separated from nearby Medvednik mountain by high pass Stolica, while the Debelo Brdo saddle separates it from Povlen in the southeast. The highest peak has the same name as the mountain itself - Jablanik, and is 1,275 m high. The hills around the peak are mainly", "id": "366162" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\nThe Nišava or Nishava (Bulgarian and , ) is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia, a right tributary, and with a length of 218 km also the longest one, of the South Morava. The Nišava originates in western Bulgaria, in the Stara Planina mountains (east of Kom Peak) near the village of Gintsi. Its source is close to the Serbian border. It enters Serbia after 67 km of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries. Because it flows through Gintsi, the upper course of the river is", "id": "9627075" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nAfter Mramorac village, the Jasenica spills over in several parallel flows, which continue until its confluence. After the Pridvorica and Vodice villages (on different arms of the river), the Jasenica reaches the town of Smederevska Palanka, the most populous settlement in its valley. This is also where the Kubršnica, its main tributary, flows into it from the left. The Jasenica then gently bends to the east, flowing into the Great Morava near the village of Veliko Orašje (the southern arm of the river flows through the town", "id": "3481502" }, { "contents": "Gruža (river)\n\n\nThe Gruža (Serbian Cyrillic: Гружа, ) is a river in central Serbia. The river is a 62 km long left tributary to the Zapadna Morava. The Gruža originates in the central part of the Rudnik mountain, right under the mountain's main settlement, the village of Rudnik, northeast of the town of Gornji Milanovac, central Serbia. The river flows south next to the village of Majdan, around the Rudnik mountain into the Takovo region and at the village of Nevade, just few kilometers away from Gornji Milanovac,", "id": "10971320" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\n(hamlet Panjak) on the Serbian-Bosnian border Crni Rzav meets the Jablanica river at the village Gornje Vardište and finally the river Beli Rzav at the village of Donje Vardište. The Rzav continues as the natural extension of the Beli Rzav, but since the Black Rzav is longer, the latter is considered to be the main headstream. It floes between the southernmost part of the Zvijezda mountain (\"Ponos\" peak) from the north and the Suha Gora mountain from the south, next to the villages of Prosjek (and", "id": "11540155" }, { "contents": "Ub (river)\n\n\nThe Ub (Serbian Cyrillic: Уб) is a river in western Serbia, a 57 km-long right and longest tributary to Tamnava river. The Ub originates from the Vlašić mountain in Podgorina region of west Serbia, near the village of Kasapo. From its source to the mouth, the river flows to the east, parallel to the river Tamnava, which it will eventually join. The villages located in the upper section of the river's flow are Družetić, Pambukovica and Čučuge, where the Ub slightly turns to the", "id": "2261401" }, { "contents": "Olomouc Region\n\n\nof the region is situated on the water level of the Morava River near to Kojetín in the Přerov District (190 m above sea level). The Morava river flows through the region and the majority of the region's territory belongs to Morava’s drainage basin. A small northern part of the region belongs to the drainage basin of Odra River, which flows to the Baltic Sea. The Olomouc Region offers a great variety of natural points of interest. Protected landscape area of the Jeseníky mountains offers a number of scenic places such", "id": "11419394" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina\n\n\nJablanica is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is situated on the Neretva river and Jablanica lake. The municipality of Jablanica is a major tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The municipality offer a wide variety of activities. The surrounding mountains such as Plasa, Čvrsnica and Prenj offer both hunting grounds and a variety of hiking trails. One popular hiking destination is \"Hajdučka Vrata\", a natural wonder, the product of wind", "id": "9009264" }, { "contents": "Krupá (Morava)\n\n\nKrupá (German: Graupa Bach) is a creek in Šumperk District, Moravia, left tributary of the Morava. Its length is 19,2 km and its drainage basin covers 112.7 km2. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 4.48 m³/s. The Krupá originates in Czech part of the Śnieżnik Mountains, 400 meters above sea level. The Krupá then goes south toward the town of Staré Město. It flows into the Morava river near Hanušovice town. River keeps its natural character with meanders and original riversides. A river bottom is", "id": "1745557" }, { "contents": "Oskava (river)\n\n\nOskava is a river in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic, left tributary of the Morava river. Its length is 50.3 km and its drainage basin covers 569 km. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 3.53 m/s. The Oskava originates from southeast slope of Kamenná hora in Hrubý Jeseník, 215 meters above sea level. The river is surrounded by woods in upper reaches, flows through hills of Nízký Jeseník in middle reaches and its lower reaches is situated in swampy floodplain of Litovelské Pomoraví Protected Landscape Area.", "id": "8538845" }, { "contents": "Crna Trava\n\n\nCrna Trava ( ) is a village and municipality located in the Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to 2011 census, the population of the village is 434 inhabitants, while population of the municipality is 1,663. This is the smallest by population and poorest municipality in Serbia. Crna Trava is famous for its migrant builders, who are considered the best in the region and are colloquially described as \"building half of Yugoslavia\". The name of the village in Serbian translates to \"Black Grass\". The origin of the name", "id": "18032485" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\n. At the village of Kušiljevo, the river receives the small stream of \"Beljeva\" from the left and turns northward, which is the general direction of its course for the rest of the flow. The river flows parallel to the Velika Morava river as its satellite flow, in the Morava's floodplain, so there are no settlements on the Resavica itself, but several large villages are located in its valley (Porodin, Žabari, Simićevo, Aleksandrovac Požarevački, Vlaški Do, Poljana), all of them located on the", "id": "4886223" }, { "contents": "Lugomir\n\n\nThe Lugomir (Serbian Cyrillic: Лугомир) is a river in central Serbia, a 57 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. The Lugomir originates from two headstreams, the Dulenska reka and the Županjevačka reka. The shorter headstream of Županjevačka reka (Cyrillic: \"Жупањевачка река\") originates from the mountain of Gledićke planine in southern Šumadija region of central Serbia. Its spring is just some 500 m away from the source of Lugomir's another headstream, the Dulenska reka. The river first flows to the east", "id": "5130918" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\ncities in Serbia, 10 km after which the Nišava empties into the Južna Morava. However, with the rapid growth of Niš in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs, the banks of the Nišava are urbanized almost to its mouth. After being divided into districts in 1992, the Nišava District (with Niš as administrative center) is named after the river. The river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area covers 4,086 km, of which about 73% in Serbia, the rest in Bulgaria", "id": "9627077" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nsection\" begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama river between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes a southern course and enter a largest canyons of its course, running through steep slopes of magnificent mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching 800–1200 meters in depth. From here Neretva flows toward the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Jezernica (also Tatinac), the Gornji and Donji Krupac, the Ljuta-Dindolka, the Jesenica, the Bjelimićka Rijeka, the Slatinica, the Račica, the Rakitnica, the Konjička", "id": "16797217" }, { "contents": "Resava (river)\n\n\nThe Resava (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресава) is a river in central Serbia, a 65 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava. It also gives the name to the surrounding Resava region, the Resava Monastery, the coal mines in its valley and a popular tourist destination of Resava Cave. The Resava originates from the Homolje region in eastern Serbia. It springs out at an altitude of 1,100 m and flows westward between the mountains of Beljanica (on the north) and Kučaj (on the south). In its", "id": "15040274" }, { "contents": "A1 motorway (Serbia)\n\n\nJužna Morava river. Southern section (Niš–Leskovac–Vranje–Macedonian border) consists of 128 km that are in service, while additional 26 km are under construction. Construction of southern section has been completed by May 2019, and last sections opened for traffic on 18 May 2019: Highway passes through valley of South Morava, passes west of Niš, by Merošina and Leskovac, and after Grdelica built highway ends. 26 kilometers of highway under construction passes through Grdelica gorge, very difficult terrain. This sections is often considered", "id": "1785427" }, { "contents": "Čivelj\n\n\nČivelj is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in the municipality of Jablanica, Herzegovina-Neretva Canton, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1991, the village had six inhabitants, all of whom were Muslims. In 2013, Čivelj had 10 inhabitants. Tourism is solid. Civelj is placed 8 kilometres from Jablanica and it is placed on Jablanica lake. In lake there are 5 types of fishes including the most popular \"pastrmka\". The village was found in 1911. by local fishermen. Near Civelj", "id": "4645021" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nAlthough these streams are of low outflow, there are also numerous wellsprings rising on both sides of the canyon at the river banks, with high-capacity discharge. Three large hydroelectric power stations operate in this section of the Neretva, between Jablanica and Mostar, namely Grabovica HPP, Salakovac HPP and Mostar HPP. Jablanica lake is a large artificial lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva expands into a wide valley. The river provided fertile, agricultural land before the lake flooded most of it. The lake", "id": "12890353" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nThe Jasenica (Serbian Cyrillic: Јасеница, ) is a river in central Serbia. It is long and is the left tributary of the Great Morava. This river gives the name to the surrounding region. The Jasenica originates from several streams, most notably the Đurinci (Cyrillic: Ђуринци) from Venčac mountain, and the Srebrenica (Cyrillic: Сребреница) from the northern slopes of the Rudnik mountain in central Serbia. At its origin, the river runs through the eastern border of the Kačer region. It flows to the southeast", "id": "3481500" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nin north Skopje, Macedonia. The streams Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is, after passing the Macedonian-Serbian border, known as the Binačka Morava. After 49 km it meets the Preševska Moravica at Bujanovac, and for the remainder, 246 km, flows as the South Morava. The South Morava belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and its own drainage area is 15,696 km², of which 1,237 km² is in Bulgaria (through its right tributary Nišava). Its average", "id": "15699472" }, { "contents": "Pešter\n\n\nRivers Uvac, Vapa, Jablanica and Grabovica flow through the plateau. In the geologic past, the field was a large lake, of which only a small Sjenica lake near the village of Tuzinje remained. The soil is mostly karst interspersed with pastures. Economy of the area relies primarily on cattle breeding, chiefly sheep. Pešter is famous for its dairy products, especially the \"Sjenica cheese\" (\"Sjenički sir\"), as well as lamb and prosciutto. The plateau is sparsely populated: most settlements are on the", "id": "16748290" }, { "contents": "Sredačka župa\n\n\nSredačka Župa (; \"county of Sredska\") is a remote geographical region, a valley, in southeastern Kosovo, below the Šar Mountains at the source of the Prizrenska Bistrica. The region, an oval basin, lies below the Šar Mountains, at the source, upper stream of the Prizrenska Bistrica (\"Prizren river\"). South of the region between the Prizren mountains and Koritnik mountain, lies the Gora region. It currently includes Sredska, Pousko, Jablanica, Lokvica, Rečane, Živinjane, Planjane, Nebregošte,", "id": "13372292" }, { "contents": "Binačka Morava\n\n\nBinačka Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Биначка Морава; ) or (\"Mirusha\") is a river which flows in southeastern Kosovo and North Macedonia. It flows generally in the southwest to northeast direction, from Macedonian border to Bujanovac, where, after 49 km, meets Preševska Moravica, to create South Morava. The river begins in the mountain of Skopska Crna Gora, in North Macedonia, north of its capital Skopje. Streams of Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is,", "id": "12867615" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwar, the Albanian population depending on the area reacted differently to incoming Serbian forces by either offering resistance or fleeing toward nearby mountains and Ottoman Kosovo. Although most of these Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces, a small presence was allowed to remain in the Jablanica valley where their descendants live today. Serbs from Lab moved to Serbia during and after the first round of hostilities in 1876, while incoming Albanian refugees thereafter 1878 repopulated their villages. Albanian refugees also settled alongside the north-eastern Ottoman-Serbian border, in urban areas", "id": "1099553" }, { "contents": "Banjska River\n\n\nThe Banjska River ( / \"Banjska reka\", \"Baths River\"), is a river in southern Serbia, the right tributary of Toplica in which it flows near Kuršumlija. It rises under the far south-eastern branch of Kopaonik. It is 22 km long, with a river basin area of 155 km². The average flow at the mouth is 0,7 m³/s. The valley of the river is mostly ravines, while the basin is rich in forest. The Kuršumlija-Kuršumlijska Banja-Prepolac Pass-Podujevo-", "id": "14979528" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nby a catastrophic flood. Then unregulated river Jablanica, swollen after a long rainy period, broke on June 6, spilled out of its banks and caused enormous material damage Lebane. Flood toll was paid and human victims (killed two people). After this tragic event, with financial help, Lebane begins to industrialize faster, and the process of industrialization has caused more versatile and faster development of the city. According to the 2011 census, the municipality has 22,000 inhabitants. The ethnic composition of the municipality: The following table", "id": "17523935" }, { "contents": "Čvrsnica\n\n\nČvrsnica () is a mountain in the Dinarides of Bosnia and Herzegovina, located in northern Herzegovina, most of the mountain is located in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton municipalities of Mostar and Jablanica while the smaller part of the mountain, around 10% is located in the municipality of Posušje. The highest peak (Pločno) is 2228 metres. Čvrsnica is surrounded by the river Neretva from the east (20 km), its tributaries Doljanka (18 km) from the north and Drežanka (19.8 km) from the south,", "id": "6129606" }, { "contents": "Myjava (river)\n\n\nThe Myjava River is a river in western Slovakia and for a small part in the Czech Republic and left tributary of the Morava River. It rises in the White Carpathians near the village of Nová Lhota in Moravia, but crosses the Czech-Slovak border shortly afterwards and flows in a southern direction until the town of Myjava, where it enters the Myjava Hills and turns west. Near Sobotište it flows into the Záhorie Lowland and turns south until the village of Jablonica, turning northwest and from Senica it flows west, passing through", "id": "2099838" }, { "contents": "West Morava\n\n\nSouth and Great Morava's meridian (south-to-north) flow, the West Morava runs in an opposed, latitudinal (west-to-east) direction, dividing the region of Šumadija of the central Serbia from the southern parts of the country. Due to the West Morava's direction, it flows between many mountains, regions and sub-regions: The West Morava river valley, Zapadno Pomoravlje, is economically the most developed of all three Morava river valleys. With the valley of the Ibar, the West", "id": "7786624" }, { "contents": "Ralja (river)\n\n\nThe Ralja () is a river in Šumadija region of Serbia, a 51 km long left tributary to the Jezava, a tributary of the Great Morava river. It also gives its name to the surrounding Šumadija's subregion of Ralja. The Ralja originates from the northern part of the Kosmaj mountain, north of the village of Velika Ivanča, in the Sopot municipality of the City of Belgrade. Almost from the source, the river valley is a route for the Belgrade-Niš railway. At the villages of Popović and Mali", "id": "2491229" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nBovan gorge carved by the river and is very popular local and regional tourist destination, especially among campers and fishermen, but the coastline is not put in order. The river continues to the south, in an inverse flow, and after the villages of Subotinac and Kraljevo, it empties into the Južna Morava at the town of Aleksinac. The lower section used to be a coal mining area too, just like the upper one, but the mines (Aleksinački Rudnik) are closed now. The Sokobanjska Moravica brlongs to the Black", "id": "1726358" }, { "contents": "Golijska Moravica\n\n\nThe Golijska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Голијска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in western Serbia. With a length of 98 km, it is the longer headstream of the Zapadna Morava (it forms it with the Đetinja), and thus, of the Velika Morava. Its name, Moravica, means \"little Morava\" in Serbian, and it also gives its name to the surrounding region and the modern Moravica District of Serbia. The Golijska Moravica originates from the western slopes of the Golija mountain and flows", "id": "5380325" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\n. The Nišava is not navigable. It is not only the longest tributary of the Južna Morava, but also the largest one in terms of discharge (36 km/s). It has many smaller tributaries, the most important being the Temštica from the right, and the Jerma (or Sukovska reka), Crvena reka, Koritnička reka and Kutinska reka from the left. The Nišava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia: the route follows the valleys of the Morava", "id": "9627078" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nThe Toplica (Serbian Cyrillic: Топлица, ) is a river in southern Serbia. The river is 130 km long and gives its name to the region it flows through, which constitutes most of the modern Toplica District of Serbia. The Toplica originates under the name of \"Duboka\" from the eastern slopes of the Kopaonik mountain, just south of the highest peak, Pančićev vrh. It flows to the southeast, on the western slopes of the Lepa Gora mountain, next to the villages of Merćez, Selova, Žuč,", "id": "19530451" }, { "contents": "Great Morava\n\n\nof the Velika Morava's right tributary Resava). The average discharge of the Velika Morava on its confluence with Danube is 255 m³/s (120 m³/s brought by Zapadna Morava, 100 m³/s by Južna Morava, and 35 m³/s amounted by the Velika Morava itself). Tributaries of the Velika Morava are short, the longest one being the Jasenica (79 km) and others rarely exceeding 50 km. Right tributaries are: Jovanovačka reka, Crnica, Ravanica, Resava and Resavica (or Resavčina). Left tributaries are more numerous,", "id": "2295702" }, { "contents": "Vevčani\n\n\nVevčani () is a village in the Republic of North Macedonia. It is the only settlement and seat of Vevčani Municipality. The village of Vevčani is found in the southwestern range at the foot of the Jablanica mountain range. It is situated from 800 – 950 metres above sea level. The village is located 14 km North-West of the town of Struga. The village is situated near the villages of Oktisi, Velešta, Podgorci, Gorna Belica with the Albanian border to the West of the village. The famous Vevčani", "id": "5042995" } ]
The Jablanica ( Serbian : Јабланица , ) is an river in southern Serbia . A left tributary of the South ( or Južna ) Morava river , it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia 's Jablanica District , with the region contributing about one third of the district 's area . The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain , near the village of Grbavce , on the administrative border of the Kosovo province . The area is rich in thermal springs , so several spas are located near the river : Stara Banja , Ravna Banja and Sijarina with popular Sijarinska Banja . At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary Čokotinska reka ( Cyrillic : Чокотинска река ) , turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point . The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the and Radan mountains , in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the in Kosovo . The river flows eastward , passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo , before reaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac , part of the depression of Leskovac , which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava . In the region , near Lebane , a famed archeological find of ( Iustiniana Prima ) is located . The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo , Vranovce , Bošnjace , Turekovac and Stopanje , reaches Vinarce , the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac , and turns north . First it flows parallel to the [START_ENT] Veternica [END_ENT] river , to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje , then parallel to the Južna Morava . After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava . From Pečenjevce , a parallel flow ( canal ) begins , connecting the Jablanica and s , some 15 km to the north . Through Južna Morava , the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin , draining an area of 895 km ² itself . It 's not navigable and has an average discharge of 6 m ³ / s , which in rainy years grows much higher , so the river floods its valley causing lots of material damage . The name of the river , Jablanica , in Serbian means the
ee48ace3-ef90-48af-addb-204fdf169930_river:14
[{"answer": "Veternica", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "5403136", "title": "Veternica"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nreaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac, part of the depression of Leskovac, which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. In the region, near Lebane, a famed archeological find of Caričin grad (\"Iustiniana Prima\") is located. The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo, Vranovce, Bošnjace, Turekovac and Stopanje, reaches Vinarce, the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac", "id": "3481303" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\n, and turns north. First it flows parallel to the Veternica river, to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje, then parallel to the Južna Morava. After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava. From Pečenjevce, a parallel flow (canal) begins, connecting the Jablanica and Toplica rivers, some 15 km to the north. Through Južna Morava, the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, draining an area of itself. It's not navigable", "id": "3481304" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\npopular Sijarinska Banja. At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary \"Čokotinska reka\" (Cyrillic: \"Чокотинска река\"), turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point. The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the Majdan and Radan mountains, in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the District of Priština in Kosovo. The river flows eastward, passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo, before", "id": "3481302" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nThe Jablanica (, ) is an river in southern Serbia. A left tributary of the South (or Južna) Morava river, it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia's Jablanica District, with the region contributing about one third of the district's area. The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain, near the village of Grbavce, on the border with Kosovo. The area is rich in thermal springs, so several spas are located near the river: Stara Banja, Ravna Banja and Sijarina with", "id": "3481301" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nJablanica with third parallel flow, the \"Sušica\", being formed in between. Settlements include many small villages, like Vina, Bukova Gora, Miroševce, Žabljane, Beli Potok and Strojkovce. In the Leskovac field, the river gently turns north, receives the Sušica from the left and reaches the town of Leskovac. The Veternica continues northward, being connected to the Jablanica river by the canal at the village of Bogojevce, before it empties into the Južna Morava. The Veternica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its", "id": "11539775" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nThe Veternica (Serbian Cyrillic: Ветерница, ) is a river in southern Serbia, a 75 km long left tributary to the Južna Morava, which gives the name to the region surrounding its valley. The Veternica originates from the Grot peak, the southernmost part of the Kukavica mountain. Four smaller streams meet at the village of Vlase and continue to the north as the Veternica. The river flows next to the villages of Golemo Selo, Oštra Glava and Gagince, where it flows parallel to the Jablanica river. As the Veternica", "id": "11539773" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nbends to the northeast, it enters the low Veternica region, part of the Leskovac field in the composite valley of the Južna Morava. Small region, located between the Kukavica mountain on the south and the Jablanica region on the north, is divided in two micro-regions, upper one being centered on the small town of Vučje (which is not located on the river itself) while the center of the lower micro-region is the town of Leskovac. As it enters the region, the Veternica furthers away from the", "id": "11539774" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nthe west, Kukavica and Čemernik in the south and Babička Gora, Seličevica and Suva Planina to the east. The largest river in the region of Leskovac is the South Morava River, which flows south to north. Tributaries of the South Morava are: the Vlasina river, which collects water from Lake Vlasina and flows through Crna Trava and Vlasotince; the Veternica river, which flows through Leskovac; the Jablanica river, which springs from the foot of Goljak and flows through Medveđa and Lebane; the Pusta (Deserted) river,", "id": "2857704" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nof 590 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and is not navigable. The region of Pusta Reka mostly correspondence with the river's watershed. It is located between the Pasjača mountain and lower Toplica region (on the north), the Southern Pomoravlje (Field of Leskovac, on the east), the Jablanica region (on the south) and the Radan mountain (on the west). The region is an agricultural area, almost without any industry, except for some smaller facilities in regional center, Bojnik", "id": "12523581" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nof Podina, Voljčince, Badnjevac and the smaller regional center Žitorađa. After the Toplica reaches municipal center of Doljevac, it enters the most densely populated part of the south Pomoravlje, turns north and flows into the Južna Morava at the village of Orljane, across the medieval ruins of Kurvin grad, as Južna Morava's longest left tributary. The Toplica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its own drainage area of 2,217 km². The river is not navigable. The river valley is a major traffic route in southern Serbia as", "id": "19530454" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nThe Sokobanjska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Сокобањска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in central eastern Serbia, a 58 km-long right tributary to the Južna Morava river. The Sokobanjska Moravica originates from the eastern slopes of the Devica mountain, near the village of Skrobnica. The river flows to the north, turns westward at the village of Levovik and enters the Banja region. The rivers flows between the northern slopes of the Devica and Ozren mountains (on the south) and southern slopes of the Rtanj mountain", "id": "1726356" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\nmouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. As the wider Jabllanica region, Medveđa also had an Albanian majority. These Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces in a way that today would be characterized as ethnic cleansing. Due to depopulation and economic considerations some small numbers of Albanians were allowed to stay and return though not to their previous settlements and instead were designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of", "id": "7117787" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\n, a notable Muslim population existed in the districts of Niš, Pirot, Vranje, Leskovac, Prokuplje and Kuršumlija. The rural parts of Toplica, Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the", "id": "1099558" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nthe southernmost slopes of the Suva Planina and Babička Gora mountains, it reaches the town of Vlasotince and western parts of the low Leskovac field, part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. After the villages of Batulovce and Stajkovce, the Vlasina empties into the Južna Morava, east of the Leskovac's eastern suburb of Mrštane. The Vlasina drains an area of 991 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin and it is not navigable. On 26 June 1988, after a period of heavy rains, Vlasina was a", "id": "14981332" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nThe Pusta River ( / \"Pusta reka\", \"Desolate River\") is a river in southern Serbia, a 71-km long left tributary to the South Morava. It also gives the name to the Pusta Reka region in its valley. The river originates northeast of Prolom Banja, near the Sokolovica village, on the northern tip of the Radan mountain, as the \"Golema River\" (\"Big River\"). It flows eastward, between the mountains of Radan (to the south) and Pasjača (to the", "id": "12523579" }, { "contents": "Persecution of Muslims during Ottoman contraction\n\n\nReka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the Turks were of Albanian origin. The Muslims in the cities of Niš and Pirot were Turkish-speaking; Vranje and Leskovac were Turkish- and Albanian-speaking; Prokuplje", "id": "8891598" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nvalley between Konjic and Jablanica, known simply as \"Neretva\" since Middle Ages, the new point for hydrographical division became dam of the Jablanica HPP where also is a place of confluence of the rivers Neretva and Rama. Here the Neretva river suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before it reach town of Jablanica. From this point it turns again toward south and enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes of the mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica", "id": "12890350" }, { "contents": "Rama (Neretva)\n\n\nRama is a river in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a major tributary of the Neretva. It joins it from the right by discharging into Neretva's artificial reservoir, Jablaničko lake, at place called Marina Pećina, near village of Gračac, between location of underground powerhouse of Rama Hydroelectric Power Station and Jablanica Dam, depending on water level in Jablaničko lake, some 15 kilometers upstream from Jablanica. The Rama flows through municipalities of Prozor-Rama and Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, while its headwaters together with wellsprings in the region of", "id": "3052779" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\nThe Kolubara (Serbian Cyrillic: Колубара, ), is a long river in western Serbia; it is an eastern, right tributary to the Sava river. Kolubara is formed by the two small rivers Obnica and Jablanica. \"Obnica\" is the river in Western Serbia that springs at the foot of the mountain Medvednik. It flows to the East, through the villages of Suvodanje, Bobova, Majinović, Pričević and Zlatarić, and at the city of Valjevo meets the river \"Jablanica\" and forms Kolubara. The Obnica is", "id": "20109582" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\ndating to the 4th century AD lay at various locations of the town, as it was a transitory zone of Upper Moesia; travel and postal stations are among the finds. Toponyms such as \"Arbanaška\" and \"Đjake\" shows an Albanian presence in the Toplica and Southern Morava regions (located north-east of contemporary Kosovo) before the expulsion of Albanians during 1877–1878 period. The rural parts of Jablanica valley and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river", "id": "7117786" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\naverage elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva again expands into a third and largest valley which provided fertile agricultural land before it was flooded by large artificial reservoir, Jablaničko Lake, formed after construction of a Jablanica Dam near town of Jablanica. The second section begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before reaches town of Jablanica, from which point turns again toward south. From", "id": "12890343" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nLebane () is a town and municipality located in Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 10,062 inhabitants, while the municipality has 20,000 inhabitants. The town is located at the confluence of the rivers Jablanica and Šumanska Reka, in the alluvial plain created by the former. Just northeast of the town a larger plain called Leskovačko polje extends toward the town of Leskovac, which is the district seat. The elevation of the town of Lebane is between 275.2 and 420 MASL.", "id": "17523929" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nRakic writes about it as a \"\"big village populated by Serbs, in a valley, on the river Jablanica, on its left bank.\"\" Only when Lebane got the role of Jablanica district headquarters, it began to gradually develop in a direction of a small town. The core of this small town was a series of houses along the Jablanica which is 45m wide here (as is even now); at the end of this series are the buildings of the Court and Municipality. The main feature of", "id": "17523931" }, { "contents": "Štulac (Lebane)\n\n\nthe village of Prekopčelica. The village is located on the valley slopes of the Caričin Potok creek. It is scattered between the altitudes of . It is situated in the wider Pusta Reka region. The village rests on the western slopes of the , which here divides the regions of Pusta Reka and Jablanica. On the west, the easternmost slopes of the Radan mountain begin. The village area covers . The Slavs settled in the area in the 7th century, centering around the ruins of Iustiniana Prima. Due to the lack of", "id": "11151840" }, { "contents": "Grdelica\n\n\nGrdelica () is a town in southern Serbia. It is situated in the Leskovac municipality, in the Jablanica District. The total population of the town was 3,194 people as of the 2011 census. For census purposes, Grdelica is divided into two adjacent parts, southern \"Grdelica town\" (\"Grdelica varoš\"; population 2,136) and northern \"Grdelica village\" (\"Grdelica selo\"; 1,058). Grdelica lies at the South Morava river, on the mountainous terrain at the entrance of the Grdelica Gorge. It", "id": "460756" }, { "contents": "Gornji Bučumet\n\n\nall settlements registered separately in the census. The three settlements lie in the South Morava basin, above the Jablanica river, and as such are located in the Upper Jablanica region. The highest mountain in Upper Bučumet is Paramid (853), with the mountain of Sv. Petar (1149) being located in Middle Bučumet. The three neighbourhoods of Bučumet are 470 to 853 metres above sea level. There is a medieval church built on the ruins of an older church. During the Toplica-Jablanica Operation (, ) in", "id": "12752738" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nthe huge floods of its daughter river. The South Morava has 157 tributaries. The most important left tributaries are: Jablanica, Veternica, Pusta reka and Toplica. Right tributaries are: Vrla, Vlasina, Nišava (the longest) and Sokobanjska Moravica. The South Morava has a significant potential for electricity production, and a huge hydroelectrical system (Vlasina- Vrla I-IV power stations) has been constructed in its drainage basin. To a certain extent, its waters are used for irrigation. The river valley's most important role", "id": "15699476" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nThe Rasina () is a river in south central Serbia. The long river flows through the Rasina region, gives its name to the modern Rasina District of Serbia, and flows into the Zapadna Morava near the city of Kruševac. Its historical name is Arsen (Αρσεγα). The Rasina springs from the southern slopes of the Goč mountain, near the village of Rašovka, southwest of the most famous Serbian spa, Vrnjačka Banja. The river originally flows to the southeast, around the mountains of Željin and Kopaonik, next to", "id": "209716" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nLeskovac (Serbian Cyrillic: Лесковац, ) is a city and the administrative center of the Jablanica District in southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the city urban area has 60,288 inhabitants, while the city administrative area has 144,206. Traces of life of the Brnjica culture (8th century BC) is seen at the Hisar Hill (Hisar Leskovac) that was protected by a deep moat with a palisade on its inner side, a fortification similar to that of another fortification on the site near Zlokućane in the Velika Morava basin", "id": "2857693" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nThe favorable location and the richness of nature made Jablanica valley important place since the earliest times. Traffic affordable and fertile, Leskovac valley has provided favorable conditions for the settlement of population. Archaeological findings, of which the most important are Hissar and Caričin grad (Iustiniana Prima) show that life in this area, continuously evolved from prehistoric man to date. First mention of Lebane as Hlebane dates back to 1512. Lebane is formed as a village of the same name after the liberation in 1878. Visiting Serbia in 1880s, M.", "id": "17523930" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nThe South Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Јужна Морава, Serbian Latin: \"Južna Morava\", ; ) is a river in eastern Kosovo and in southern Serbia, which represents the shorter headwater of Great Morava. Today, it is 295 km long, including its source river Binačka Morava. It flows generally in the south to north direction, from Macedonian border to Kosovo and onwards to Central Serbia, where it meets West Morava at Stalać, to create Great Morava. The river rises in the Skopska Crna Gora mountain", "id": "15699471" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\nis the Rzav's longer headstream. It originates from the Čigota mountain, eastern section of the Zlatibor mountain. The river originally flows northward, next to the villages of Vodice and Jokina Ćuprija, reaches the central section of the Zlatibor where it is dammed and creates the artificial Ribnica lake (surface area of 10 km²), after the nearby village of Ribnica. After the lake, the river sharply turns west and soon gets followed by the parallel stream of the \"Jablanica\" river. After crossing the village of Mokra Gora", "id": "11540154" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\n25 km long. Jablanica originates on the eastern slopes of the Jablanik mountain, just few kilometers away from Obnica. It curves around Parač mountain and next to the village of Balinović, before it meets Obnica in Valjevo. Jablanica is 21.5 km long. This is also the beginning of the long region of the Kolubara valley, divided in two large parts, referred to as Upper (\"gornja\") Kolubara and Lower (\"donja\") Kolubara (around the Belgrade's suburb of Obrenovac). At Valjevo, the", "id": "20109583" }, { "contents": "Jablanica District\n\n\nThe Jablanica District (, ) is one of nine administrative districts of Southern and Eastern Serbia. It expands in the south-eastern parts of Serbia. According to the 2011 census results, it has a population of 215,463 inhabitants. The administrative center of the district is the city of Leskovac. The district encompasses the municipalities of: According to the 2011 census results, the Jablanica Distract has a total population of 216,304 inhabitants. Ethnic composition of the Jablanica District: Famous cultural-historic monuments in this District are: the Roman", "id": "13223854" }, { "contents": "Kalna, Crna Trava\n\n\nKalna () is a small village in the Crna Trava municipality of the Jablanica District of Serbia. Kalna village is an old Serbian village, 35 km away from the Crna Trava. It is located between Tumba and Serbian-Bulgarian border, at an altitude of 500 to 1100 m. The total area is rural area of 7285 hectares. The Kalna can be reached from three directions: The road in this way was there since the Turkish rule. It was the shortest connection of Leskovac valley (Dubočica) to Sofia and Constantinople", "id": "11211518" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina-Neretva Canton\n\n\ntook place there during World War II and there is a large museum in Jablanica dedicated to these battles. The Neretva river runs through the cities of Konjic, Jablanica, Mostar and Čapljina before it flows through Croatia and into the Adriatic Sea. There are large lakes in the canton such as the Jablanica lake located around the city Jablanica. The southern most municipality in the canton is the Neum municipality which borders the Adriatic sea and the eastern most municipality is the Ravno municipality along the border with Croatia. Of the ten cantons comprising", "id": "3225485" }, { "contents": "Vardar Corps\n\n\nThe Vardar Corps was a corps of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland (JVuO) that operated on the left bank of the river Vardar during the World War II in Yugoslavia on the territory of modern-day North Macedonia and southern Serbia. Its commander was former Captain of the Royal Guard of the Royal Yugoslav Army Stojan Krstić. It consisted of four brigades with total number of 1,000 soldiers. Together with Jablanica Corps, South Morava Corps and Flying Corps it belonged under \"Mountain Staff 110\" () located in Sijarinska Banja", "id": "11325997" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nthe villages of Mitrovo Polje, Bzenica, Pleš, Jablanica, Grčak, Toskići, Budilovina and Milentija. When the Rasina reaches the small town of Brus, it enters the upper Rasina region and continues next to the villages of Tršanovci, Lepenac and Razbojna. At this point the river reaches the western side of the Veliki Jastrebac mountain, and makes a wide, elbow turn to the north. In this part of the course, the Rasina also makes a southeast border of the Aleksandrovačka Župa region. After the villages of Bogiše", "id": "209717" }, { "contents": "Doljanka\n\n\nDoljanka is a right tributary of Neretva river in North Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The length of Doljanka is around 18 km and reaches an altitude drop of about 400 m. Arises from sources scattered type under the far northeast slopes of Vran mountain on altitude of 1324 m. It runs through limestone canyon, which is high up to 1,200 m and flows through the village of Doljani. Doljanka flows into the Neretva River between Jablanica and Mostar, at an altitude of 300 m. It is also the connection over which trouts from the Neretva", "id": "8874715" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nValley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Albanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje", "id": "17667163" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n. The Neretva then flows northwest, through Konjic. It enters the Jablanica Reservoir (\"Jablaničko jezero\"), one of the largest in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake ends near the town of Jablanica. From here on, the Neretva turns southward, continuing to the Adriatic Sea. With the mountains lining its shores gradually receding, the Neretva enters a valley where the city of Mostar lies. It flows under the old bridge (\"Stari most\") and continues, now wider, toward the town of Čapljina and", "id": "3021139" }, { "contents": "Radan (mountain)\n\n\nRadan (Serbian Cyrillic: Радан) is a mountain in southern Serbia, near the town of Kuršumlija. Its highest peak, Šopot, has an elevation of 1,408 meters above sea level. Radan separates the valleys of the Toplica and Jablanica rivers. It is well covered with deciduous and evergreen forests. The best known spot on Radan is the Devil's Town – a peculiar rock formation consisting of hundreds of mushroom-like posts, located on its southern slopes. Near the Devil's Town there are ruins of Ivanova kula –", "id": "3957176" }, { "contents": "Crni Timok\n\n\nкотлина, \"depression of Crna Reka\"), populated with many smaller villages (Lukovo, Jablanica, Valakonje, Savinac, Gamzigrad, Zvezdan). At Gamzigrad there is also an important archeological site from Roman times. After a flow of 84 km, the Crni Timok reaches Zaječar, where it joins the Beli Timok River, forming the Veliki Timok River. It drains an area of . Early in its course it receives from the right the Radovanska, Suva, Velika, Salešča, Šarbanovačka, Jasenova, Bajnska and Suva", "id": "11459489" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (mountain range)\n\n\nJablanica ( ; ) is a mountain range in Southern and Southeastern Europe, stretching north-south direction across the border of Albania and the Republic of North Macedonia. The long mountain ridge is higher than for approximately , while the highest part, located in its very center, is Black Stone at high. Both countries have 50% of the mountain, Albania the west and North Macedonia the east. Jablanica Mountain contains many large mountain lakes. Shebenik mountain is located just to the west of Jablanica and give name to the Shebenik", "id": "3232652" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nThe Vlasina (Serbian Cyrillic: Власина), is a river in southeastern Serbia, a 70 km-long outflow of the Vlasina Lake and a right tributary to the Južna Morava, which also gives its name to the surrounding Vlasina region. The Vlasina flows out from the Vlasina Lake at an altitude of 1,213 m. Lake used to be a large, muddy peat bog, but in 1947-51 the Vlasina was dammed by the long, earth dam and the bog was turned into an artificial lake. The river flows to", "id": "14981330" }, { "contents": "Desná (Morava)\n\n\nDesná () is a river situated in Olomouc region of Czech republic, left tributary of the Morava. It is 43.4 km long, and its basin area is 338 km. The Desná river originates at the confluence of Hučivá Desná and Divoká Desná in Kouty nad Desnou, the village situated in deep valley of High Ash Mountains. The Desná then goes southwest through a valley toward the town of Šumperk. After approximately 43.4 km, the Desná flows into the Morava river near Postřelmov village.The mean annual discharge at its mouth", "id": "20977814" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nSerbian forces then headed south into the Morava valley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Muslims fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Turks fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Muslims departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessalonika. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in", "id": "1099566" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n, in the center of the region. Other larger towns include Trebinje, Stolac, Široki Brijeg, Posušje, Ljubuški, Grude, Konjic, and Čapljina. Borders between Herzegovina and Bosnia are unclear and often disputed. The upper flow of the Neretva River lies in northern Herzegovina, a heavily forested area with fast-flowing rivers and high mountains. Konjic and Jablanica lie in this area. The Neretva rises on Lebršnik Mountain, close to the Montenegro border, and as the river flows west, it enters Herzegovina. The entire", "id": "3021137" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nUpper Neretva, of the Neretva river from its source at 1,227 m.a.s.l. and headwaters gorge all the way to the town of Konjic is 90 km, flows from south to north - north-west as most of the Bosnia and Herzegovina rivers belonging to the Danube watershed, and cover some 1,390 km with average elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva briefly expanding into a wide valley which provides fertile agricultural land. There exists a large Jablaničko Lake, artificially formed after construction of dam near Jablanica. \"Second", "id": "16797216" }, { "contents": "Kubršnica\n\n\nThe Kubršnica (Serbian Cyrillic: Кубршница) is a river in Šumadija region of central Serbia, a 42 km-long left and the longest tributary to the Jasenica river. The Kubršnica originates from the Venčac mountain, in the Jasenica sub-region of Šumadija, in the wider area of the town of Aranđelovac. The terrain in the source area of the river is rich in marble and fireclay. The river flows to the east, next to the Aranđelovac's suburb of Banja and turns north near Topola. After the villages", "id": "5629731" }, { "contents": "Peć Bistrica\n\n\nkm-long, Rugovo glacier. The gorge is sparsely inhabited (the village of Mali Štupelj). As it comes out of the gorge, the Peć Bistrica reaches the town of Peć and enters the bottom of the Metohija depression through which it flows for the rest of its course. It runs parallel to the flows of the White Drin to the north and the Dečanska Bistrica to the south, next to the villages of Goraždevac, Lješane, Jablanica, Drenovce and Zaimovo, before it empties into the White Drin south of", "id": "15886949" }, { "contents": "Zlatibor\n\n\nsylvestris\" var. \"zlatiborica\" is a subspecies of pine originating from the mountain, and is endangered today. A hill by the name of Cigla\",\" located near the nearby village of Jablanica, still has some borderline markings of the Kingdom of Serbia, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Zlatibor itself is located in the northern part of the Stari Vlah region, a historical border region between Raška, Herzegovina and Bosnia. It spreads over an area of , in length, southeast to northwest, and up", "id": "3906304" }, { "contents": "Serbian Christmas traditions\n\n\nhousehold. The members of the group were called \"koledari\". The \"koleda\" was carried out from the Feast of Saint Ignatius Theophorus (five days before Christmas) up until the Epiphany. This custom was best preserved in the upper Pčinja District, and in the region around the River South Morava in the Jablanica District, southeastern Serbia. Regarded as pagan and discouraged by the Serbian Orthodox Church, the \"koleda\" ceased to be performed among most of the Serbs during the 19th and 20th centuries. \"Koledari\"", "id": "20573743" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwere designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of Medveđa have small numbers of Albanians and their descendants remained. This was due to a local Ottoman Albanian commander Shahid Pasha from the Jablanica area negotiating on good terms with Prince Milan and thereby guaranteeing their presence. Some other Albanians such as merchants attempted to remain in Niš, but they left after murders occurred and their property was sold off at low values. In 1879, some Albanian refugees from", "id": "1099570" }, { "contents": "Kosovo Pomoravlje\n\n\nThe region's largest cities are Gjilan and Bujanovac. The region is known as \"Kosovsko Pomoravlje\" (Косовско Поморавље, \"Morava Valley of Kosovo\") in Serbian and as Lugina e Anamoraves Binçes (\"Valley of Binač Morava\") in Albanian. Its name is derived from the Binač Morava River, which flows through northern Macedonia, eastern Kosovo and southern Serbia as part of the Great Morava river system. The region includes part of the valley and the Karadak and Koznik mountains. Gjilan has six municipalities and 287 smaller", "id": "13339352" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nAlbanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje, with the intention of then turning west and", "id": "17667142" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\nThe Resavčina (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресавчина) is a river in Serbia, a 32 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. It is sometimes also called \"Resavica\" or \"Resava\" (not to be confused with another Velika Morava's right tributary of Resava or its own tributary of Resavica). The Resavčina originates near the village of Proštinac in Svilajnac municipality. The river originally flows to the north, but soon turns west at the village of Dubnica and enters the western half of the Veliko Pomoravlje region", "id": "4886222" }, { "contents": "Ibar (river)\n\n\nThe Ibar, also known as the Ibër and Ibri (, , ), is a river that flows through eastern Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, with a total length of . The river begins in the Hajla mountain, in Rožaje, eastern Montenegro, and passes through Kosovo to flow into the West Morava river near Kraljevo, central Serbia. It belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area is , with an average discharge of 60 m³/s at the mouth. It is not navigable. The Ibar originates from", "id": "4536148" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Ilirska Bistrica\n\n\nJablanica (; ) is a settlement southeast of Ilirska Bistrica in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. Jablanica is the site of three known mass graves or unmarked graves from the end of the Second World War. They all contain the remains of German soldiers from the 97th Corps that were killed at the beginning of May 1945. The Mountain Fields Mass Grave (), also known as the Mountain Mass Grave (), lies in a meadow about 1.6 km northeast of Jablanica and contains the remains of 10 soldiers. The Solne Mass", "id": "16911511" }, { "contents": "Čezsoča\n\n\nČezsoča (; ) is a settlement in the Municipality of Bovec in the Littoral region of Slovenia. It includes the hamlets of Gorenja Vas (), Dolenja Vas (), Jablanica, Kršovec, and Na Glavi. Čezsoča lies in the valley on the left bank of the Soča River. The terrain then rises up towards Mount Polovnik (1,480 m). East of the settlement is Humčič Hill (810 m), behind which rises Mount Javoršček (1,557 m). Oplenk Creek flows through the village between Gorenja Vas and", "id": "14920585" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nJablanica, the Neretva enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching in depth. Three hydroelectric dams operate between Jablanica and Mostar. When the Neretva expands for the second and final time, it reaches its third section. This area is often colloquially called the \"\"Bosnian and Herzegovinian California\"\". The last of its course forms wide alluvial delta, before the river empties into the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Tatinac (also known as the", "id": "12890344" }, { "contents": "Jablaničko lake\n\n\nJablaničko lake () is a large artificially formed lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva briefly expands into a wide valley. River provided lot of fertile, agricultural land there, before lake flooded most of it. The lake was created in 1953 after construction of Jablanica Dam near Jablanica in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake has an irregular elongated shape. Its width varies along its length. The lake is a popular vacation destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Swimming, boating and especially fishing are popular activities", "id": "13828307" }, { "contents": "Jablanica Dam\n\n\nThe Jablanica Dam is an arch-gravity dam on the Neretva River about northeast of Jablanica in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The dam was constructed between 1947 and 1955 with the primary purpose of hydroelectric power production. The power station was commissioned in two stages, from 1955 until 1958. The first generator was commissioned in February 1955. An upgrade in 2008 increased the installed capacity of the power station from 150 MW to 180 MW. The dam's power station is located about to the southeast near Jablanica", "id": "854706" }, { "contents": "Jablanik\n\n\nJablanik (Serbian Cyrillic: Јабланик) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Valjevo. Its highest peak \"Jablanik\" has an elevation of 1,275 meters(10001020_ above sea level. Jablanik is located at the source of the river Jablanica. It is separated from nearby Medvednik mountain by high pass Stolica, while the Debelo Brdo saddle separates it from Povlen in the southeast. The highest peak has the same name as the mountain itself - Jablanik, and is 1,275 m high. The hills around the peak are mainly", "id": "366162" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\nThe Nišava or Nishava (Bulgarian and , ) is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia, a right tributary, and with a length of 218 km also the longest one, of the South Morava. The Nišava originates in western Bulgaria, in the Stara Planina mountains (east of Kom Peak) near the village of Gintsi. Its source is close to the Serbian border. It enters Serbia after 67 km of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries. Because it flows through Gintsi, the upper course of the river is", "id": "9627075" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nAfter Mramorac village, the Jasenica spills over in several parallel flows, which continue until its confluence. After the Pridvorica and Vodice villages (on different arms of the river), the Jasenica reaches the town of Smederevska Palanka, the most populous settlement in its valley. This is also where the Kubršnica, its main tributary, flows into it from the left. The Jasenica then gently bends to the east, flowing into the Great Morava near the village of Veliko Orašje (the southern arm of the river flows through the town", "id": "3481502" }, { "contents": "Gruža (river)\n\n\nThe Gruža (Serbian Cyrillic: Гружа, ) is a river in central Serbia. The river is a 62 km long left tributary to the Zapadna Morava. The Gruža originates in the central part of the Rudnik mountain, right under the mountain's main settlement, the village of Rudnik, northeast of the town of Gornji Milanovac, central Serbia. The river flows south next to the village of Majdan, around the Rudnik mountain into the Takovo region and at the village of Nevade, just few kilometers away from Gornji Milanovac,", "id": "10971320" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\n(hamlet Panjak) on the Serbian-Bosnian border Crni Rzav meets the Jablanica river at the village Gornje Vardište and finally the river Beli Rzav at the village of Donje Vardište. The Rzav continues as the natural extension of the Beli Rzav, but since the Black Rzav is longer, the latter is considered to be the main headstream. It floes between the southernmost part of the Zvijezda mountain (\"Ponos\" peak) from the north and the Suha Gora mountain from the south, next to the villages of Prosjek (and", "id": "11540155" }, { "contents": "Ub (river)\n\n\nThe Ub (Serbian Cyrillic: Уб) is a river in western Serbia, a 57 km-long right and longest tributary to Tamnava river. The Ub originates from the Vlašić mountain in Podgorina region of west Serbia, near the village of Kasapo. From its source to the mouth, the river flows to the east, parallel to the river Tamnava, which it will eventually join. The villages located in the upper section of the river's flow are Družetić, Pambukovica and Čučuge, where the Ub slightly turns to the", "id": "2261401" }, { "contents": "Olomouc Region\n\n\nof the region is situated on the water level of the Morava River near to Kojetín in the Přerov District (190 m above sea level). The Morava river flows through the region and the majority of the region's territory belongs to Morava’s drainage basin. A small northern part of the region belongs to the drainage basin of Odra River, which flows to the Baltic Sea. The Olomouc Region offers a great variety of natural points of interest. Protected landscape area of the Jeseníky mountains offers a number of scenic places such", "id": "11419394" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina\n\n\nJablanica is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is situated on the Neretva river and Jablanica lake. The municipality of Jablanica is a major tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The municipality offer a wide variety of activities. The surrounding mountains such as Plasa, Čvrsnica and Prenj offer both hunting grounds and a variety of hiking trails. One popular hiking destination is \"Hajdučka Vrata\", a natural wonder, the product of wind", "id": "9009264" }, { "contents": "Krupá (Morava)\n\n\nKrupá (German: Graupa Bach) is a creek in Šumperk District, Moravia, left tributary of the Morava. Its length is 19,2 km and its drainage basin covers 112.7 km2. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 4.48 m³/s. The Krupá originates in Czech part of the Śnieżnik Mountains, 400 meters above sea level. The Krupá then goes south toward the town of Staré Město. It flows into the Morava river near Hanušovice town. River keeps its natural character with meanders and original riversides. A river bottom is", "id": "1745557" }, { "contents": "Oskava (river)\n\n\nOskava is a river in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic, left tributary of the Morava river. Its length is 50.3 km and its drainage basin covers 569 km. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 3.53 m/s. The Oskava originates from southeast slope of Kamenná hora in Hrubý Jeseník, 215 meters above sea level. The river is surrounded by woods in upper reaches, flows through hills of Nízký Jeseník in middle reaches and its lower reaches is situated in swampy floodplain of Litovelské Pomoraví Protected Landscape Area.", "id": "8538845" }, { "contents": "Crna Trava\n\n\nCrna Trava ( ) is a village and municipality located in the Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to 2011 census, the population of the village is 434 inhabitants, while population of the municipality is 1,663. This is the smallest by population and poorest municipality in Serbia. Crna Trava is famous for its migrant builders, who are considered the best in the region and are colloquially described as \"building half of Yugoslavia\". The name of the village in Serbian translates to \"Black Grass\". The origin of the name", "id": "18032485" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\n. At the village of Kušiljevo, the river receives the small stream of \"Beljeva\" from the left and turns northward, which is the general direction of its course for the rest of the flow. The river flows parallel to the Velika Morava river as its satellite flow, in the Morava's floodplain, so there are no settlements on the Resavica itself, but several large villages are located in its valley (Porodin, Žabari, Simićevo, Aleksandrovac Požarevački, Vlaški Do, Poljana), all of them located on the", "id": "4886223" }, { "contents": "Lugomir\n\n\nThe Lugomir (Serbian Cyrillic: Лугомир) is a river in central Serbia, a 57 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. The Lugomir originates from two headstreams, the Dulenska reka and the Županjevačka reka. The shorter headstream of Županjevačka reka (Cyrillic: \"Жупањевачка река\") originates from the mountain of Gledićke planine in southern Šumadija region of central Serbia. Its spring is just some 500 m away from the source of Lugomir's another headstream, the Dulenska reka. The river first flows to the east", "id": "5130918" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\ncities in Serbia, 10 km after which the Nišava empties into the Južna Morava. However, with the rapid growth of Niš in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs, the banks of the Nišava are urbanized almost to its mouth. After being divided into districts in 1992, the Nišava District (with Niš as administrative center) is named after the river. The river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area covers 4,086 km, of which about 73% in Serbia, the rest in Bulgaria", "id": "9627077" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nsection\" begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama river between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes a southern course and enter a largest canyons of its course, running through steep slopes of magnificent mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching 800–1200 meters in depth. From here Neretva flows toward the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Jezernica (also Tatinac), the Gornji and Donji Krupac, the Ljuta-Dindolka, the Jesenica, the Bjelimićka Rijeka, the Slatinica, the Račica, the Rakitnica, the Konjička", "id": "16797217" }, { "contents": "Resava (river)\n\n\nThe Resava (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресава) is a river in central Serbia, a 65 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava. It also gives the name to the surrounding Resava region, the Resava Monastery, the coal mines in its valley and a popular tourist destination of Resava Cave. The Resava originates from the Homolje region in eastern Serbia. It springs out at an altitude of 1,100 m and flows westward between the mountains of Beljanica (on the north) and Kučaj (on the south). In its", "id": "15040274" }, { "contents": "A1 motorway (Serbia)\n\n\nJužna Morava river. Southern section (Niš–Leskovac–Vranje–Macedonian border) consists of 128 km that are in service, while additional 26 km are under construction. Construction of southern section has been completed by May 2019, and last sections opened for traffic on 18 May 2019: Highway passes through valley of South Morava, passes west of Niš, by Merošina and Leskovac, and after Grdelica built highway ends. 26 kilometers of highway under construction passes through Grdelica gorge, very difficult terrain. This sections is often considered", "id": "1785427" }, { "contents": "Čivelj\n\n\nČivelj is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in the municipality of Jablanica, Herzegovina-Neretva Canton, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1991, the village had six inhabitants, all of whom were Muslims. In 2013, Čivelj had 10 inhabitants. Tourism is solid. Civelj is placed 8 kilometres from Jablanica and it is placed on Jablanica lake. In lake there are 5 types of fishes including the most popular \"pastrmka\". The village was found in 1911. by local fishermen. Near Civelj", "id": "4645021" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nAlthough these streams are of low outflow, there are also numerous wellsprings rising on both sides of the canyon at the river banks, with high-capacity discharge. Three large hydroelectric power stations operate in this section of the Neretva, between Jablanica and Mostar, namely Grabovica HPP, Salakovac HPP and Mostar HPP. Jablanica lake is a large artificial lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva expands into a wide valley. The river provided fertile, agricultural land before the lake flooded most of it. The lake", "id": "12890353" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nThe Jasenica (Serbian Cyrillic: Јасеница, ) is a river in central Serbia. It is long and is the left tributary of the Great Morava. This river gives the name to the surrounding region. The Jasenica originates from several streams, most notably the Đurinci (Cyrillic: Ђуринци) from Venčac mountain, and the Srebrenica (Cyrillic: Сребреница) from the northern slopes of the Rudnik mountain in central Serbia. At its origin, the river runs through the eastern border of the Kačer region. It flows to the southeast", "id": "3481500" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nin north Skopje, Macedonia. The streams Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is, after passing the Macedonian-Serbian border, known as the Binačka Morava. After 49 km it meets the Preševska Moravica at Bujanovac, and for the remainder, 246 km, flows as the South Morava. The South Morava belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and its own drainage area is 15,696 km², of which 1,237 km² is in Bulgaria (through its right tributary Nišava). Its average", "id": "15699472" }, { "contents": "Pešter\n\n\nRivers Uvac, Vapa, Jablanica and Grabovica flow through the plateau. In the geologic past, the field was a large lake, of which only a small Sjenica lake near the village of Tuzinje remained. The soil is mostly karst interspersed with pastures. Economy of the area relies primarily on cattle breeding, chiefly sheep. Pešter is famous for its dairy products, especially the \"Sjenica cheese\" (\"Sjenički sir\"), as well as lamb and prosciutto. The plateau is sparsely populated: most settlements are on the", "id": "16748290" }, { "contents": "Sredačka župa\n\n\nSredačka Župa (; \"county of Sredska\") is a remote geographical region, a valley, in southeastern Kosovo, below the Šar Mountains at the source of the Prizrenska Bistrica. The region, an oval basin, lies below the Šar Mountains, at the source, upper stream of the Prizrenska Bistrica (\"Prizren river\"). South of the region between the Prizren mountains and Koritnik mountain, lies the Gora region. It currently includes Sredska, Pousko, Jablanica, Lokvica, Rečane, Živinjane, Planjane, Nebregošte,", "id": "13372292" }, { "contents": "Binačka Morava\n\n\nBinačka Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Биначка Морава; ) or (\"Mirusha\") is a river which flows in southeastern Kosovo and North Macedonia. It flows generally in the southwest to northeast direction, from Macedonian border to Bujanovac, where, after 49 km, meets Preševska Moravica, to create South Morava. The river begins in the mountain of Skopska Crna Gora, in North Macedonia, north of its capital Skopje. Streams of Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is,", "id": "12867615" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwar, the Albanian population depending on the area reacted differently to incoming Serbian forces by either offering resistance or fleeing toward nearby mountains and Ottoman Kosovo. Although most of these Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces, a small presence was allowed to remain in the Jablanica valley where their descendants live today. Serbs from Lab moved to Serbia during and after the first round of hostilities in 1876, while incoming Albanian refugees thereafter 1878 repopulated their villages. Albanian refugees also settled alongside the north-eastern Ottoman-Serbian border, in urban areas", "id": "1099553" }, { "contents": "Banjska River\n\n\nThe Banjska River ( / \"Banjska reka\", \"Baths River\"), is a river in southern Serbia, the right tributary of Toplica in which it flows near Kuršumlija. It rises under the far south-eastern branch of Kopaonik. It is 22 km long, with a river basin area of 155 km². The average flow at the mouth is 0,7 m³/s. The valley of the river is mostly ravines, while the basin is rich in forest. The Kuršumlija-Kuršumlijska Banja-Prepolac Pass-Podujevo-", "id": "14979528" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nby a catastrophic flood. Then unregulated river Jablanica, swollen after a long rainy period, broke on June 6, spilled out of its banks and caused enormous material damage Lebane. Flood toll was paid and human victims (killed two people). After this tragic event, with financial help, Lebane begins to industrialize faster, and the process of industrialization has caused more versatile and faster development of the city. According to the 2011 census, the municipality has 22,000 inhabitants. The ethnic composition of the municipality: The following table", "id": "17523935" }, { "contents": "Čvrsnica\n\n\nČvrsnica () is a mountain in the Dinarides of Bosnia and Herzegovina, located in northern Herzegovina, most of the mountain is located in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton municipalities of Mostar and Jablanica while the smaller part of the mountain, around 10% is located in the municipality of Posušje. The highest peak (Pločno) is 2228 metres. Čvrsnica is surrounded by the river Neretva from the east (20 km), its tributaries Doljanka (18 km) from the north and Drežanka (19.8 km) from the south,", "id": "6129606" }, { "contents": "Myjava (river)\n\n\nThe Myjava River is a river in western Slovakia and for a small part in the Czech Republic and left tributary of the Morava River. It rises in the White Carpathians near the village of Nová Lhota in Moravia, but crosses the Czech-Slovak border shortly afterwards and flows in a southern direction until the town of Myjava, where it enters the Myjava Hills and turns west. Near Sobotište it flows into the Záhorie Lowland and turns south until the village of Jablonica, turning northwest and from Senica it flows west, passing through", "id": "2099838" }, { "contents": "West Morava\n\n\nSouth and Great Morava's meridian (south-to-north) flow, the West Morava runs in an opposed, latitudinal (west-to-east) direction, dividing the region of Šumadija of the central Serbia from the southern parts of the country. Due to the West Morava's direction, it flows between many mountains, regions and sub-regions: The West Morava river valley, Zapadno Pomoravlje, is economically the most developed of all three Morava river valleys. With the valley of the Ibar, the West", "id": "7786624" }, { "contents": "Ralja (river)\n\n\nThe Ralja () is a river in Šumadija region of Serbia, a 51 km long left tributary to the Jezava, a tributary of the Great Morava river. It also gives its name to the surrounding Šumadija's subregion of Ralja. The Ralja originates from the northern part of the Kosmaj mountain, north of the village of Velika Ivanča, in the Sopot municipality of the City of Belgrade. Almost from the source, the river valley is a route for the Belgrade-Niš railway. At the villages of Popović and Mali", "id": "2491229" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nBovan gorge carved by the river and is very popular local and regional tourist destination, especially among campers and fishermen, but the coastline is not put in order. The river continues to the south, in an inverse flow, and after the villages of Subotinac and Kraljevo, it empties into the Južna Morava at the town of Aleksinac. The lower section used to be a coal mining area too, just like the upper one, but the mines (Aleksinački Rudnik) are closed now. The Sokobanjska Moravica brlongs to the Black", "id": "1726358" }, { "contents": "Golijska Moravica\n\n\nThe Golijska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Голијска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in western Serbia. With a length of 98 km, it is the longer headstream of the Zapadna Morava (it forms it with the Đetinja), and thus, of the Velika Morava. Its name, Moravica, means \"little Morava\" in Serbian, and it also gives its name to the surrounding region and the modern Moravica District of Serbia. The Golijska Moravica originates from the western slopes of the Golija mountain and flows", "id": "5380325" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\n. The Nišava is not navigable. It is not only the longest tributary of the Južna Morava, but also the largest one in terms of discharge (36 km/s). It has many smaller tributaries, the most important being the Temštica from the right, and the Jerma (or Sukovska reka), Crvena reka, Koritnička reka and Kutinska reka from the left. The Nišava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia: the route follows the valleys of the Morava", "id": "9627078" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nThe Toplica (Serbian Cyrillic: Топлица, ) is a river in southern Serbia. The river is 130 km long and gives its name to the region it flows through, which constitutes most of the modern Toplica District of Serbia. The Toplica originates under the name of \"Duboka\" from the eastern slopes of the Kopaonik mountain, just south of the highest peak, Pančićev vrh. It flows to the southeast, on the western slopes of the Lepa Gora mountain, next to the villages of Merćez, Selova, Žuč,", "id": "19530451" }, { "contents": "Great Morava\n\n\nof the Velika Morava's right tributary Resava). The average discharge of the Velika Morava on its confluence with Danube is 255 m³/s (120 m³/s brought by Zapadna Morava, 100 m³/s by Južna Morava, and 35 m³/s amounted by the Velika Morava itself). Tributaries of the Velika Morava are short, the longest one being the Jasenica (79 km) and others rarely exceeding 50 km. Right tributaries are: Jovanovačka reka, Crnica, Ravanica, Resava and Resavica (or Resavčina). Left tributaries are more numerous,", "id": "2295702" }, { "contents": "Vevčani\n\n\nVevčani () is a village in the Republic of North Macedonia. It is the only settlement and seat of Vevčani Municipality. The village of Vevčani is found in the southwestern range at the foot of the Jablanica mountain range. It is situated from 800 – 950 metres above sea level. The village is located 14 km North-West of the town of Struga. The village is situated near the villages of Oktisi, Velešta, Podgorci, Gorna Belica with the Albanian border to the West of the village. The famous Vevčani", "id": "5042995" } ]
The Jablanica ( Serbian : Јабланица , ) is an river in southern Serbia . A left tributary of the South ( or Južna ) Morava river , it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia 's Jablanica District , with the region contributing about one third of the district 's area . The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain , near the village of Grbavce , on the administrative border of the Kosovo province . The area is rich in thermal springs , so several spas are located near the river : Stara Banja , Ravna Banja and Sijarina with popular Sijarinska Banja . At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary Čokotinska reka ( Cyrillic : Чокотинска река ) , turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point . The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the and Radan mountains , in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the in Kosovo . The river flows eastward , passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo , before reaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac , part of the depression of Leskovac , which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava . In the region , near Lebane , a famed archeological find of ( Iustiniana Prima ) is located . The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo , Vranovce , Bošnjace , Turekovac and Stopanje , reaches Vinarce , the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac , and turns north . First it flows parallel to the Veternica river , to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje , then parallel to the Južna Morava . After the villages of Dupljane and [START_ENT] Pečenjevce [END_ENT] it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava . From Pečenjevce , a parallel flow ( canal ) begins , connecting the Jablanica and s , some 15 km to the north . Through Južna Morava , the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin , draining an area of 895 km ² itself . It 's not navigable and has an average discharge of 6 m ³ / s , which in rainy years grows much higher , so the river floods its valley causing lots of material damage . The name of the river , Jablanica , in Serbian means the
792a5aaa-1481-448c-a878-46e5aac53461_river:15
[{"answer": "Pe\u010denjevce", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "6549867", "title": "Pe\u010denjevce"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nreaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac, part of the depression of Leskovac, which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. In the region, near Lebane, a famed archeological find of Caričin grad (\"Iustiniana Prima\") is located. The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo, Vranovce, Bošnjace, Turekovac and Stopanje, reaches Vinarce, the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac", "id": "3481303" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\n, and turns north. First it flows parallel to the Veternica river, to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje, then parallel to the Južna Morava. After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava. From Pečenjevce, a parallel flow (canal) begins, connecting the Jablanica and Toplica rivers, some 15 km to the north. Through Južna Morava, the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, draining an area of itself. It's not navigable", "id": "3481304" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\npopular Sijarinska Banja. At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary \"Čokotinska reka\" (Cyrillic: \"Чокотинска река\"), turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point. The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the Majdan and Radan mountains, in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the District of Priština in Kosovo. The river flows eastward, passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo, before", "id": "3481302" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nThe Jablanica (, ) is an river in southern Serbia. A left tributary of the South (or Južna) Morava river, it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia's Jablanica District, with the region contributing about one third of the district's area. The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain, near the village of Grbavce, on the border with Kosovo. The area is rich in thermal springs, so several spas are located near the river: Stara Banja, Ravna Banja and Sijarina with", "id": "3481301" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nJablanica with third parallel flow, the \"Sušica\", being formed in between. Settlements include many small villages, like Vina, Bukova Gora, Miroševce, Žabljane, Beli Potok and Strojkovce. In the Leskovac field, the river gently turns north, receives the Sušica from the left and reaches the town of Leskovac. The Veternica continues northward, being connected to the Jablanica river by the canal at the village of Bogojevce, before it empties into the Južna Morava. The Veternica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its", "id": "11539775" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nThe Veternica (Serbian Cyrillic: Ветерница, ) is a river in southern Serbia, a 75 km long left tributary to the Južna Morava, which gives the name to the region surrounding its valley. The Veternica originates from the Grot peak, the southernmost part of the Kukavica mountain. Four smaller streams meet at the village of Vlase and continue to the north as the Veternica. The river flows next to the villages of Golemo Selo, Oštra Glava and Gagince, where it flows parallel to the Jablanica river. As the Veternica", "id": "11539773" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nbends to the northeast, it enters the low Veternica region, part of the Leskovac field in the composite valley of the Južna Morava. Small region, located between the Kukavica mountain on the south and the Jablanica region on the north, is divided in two micro-regions, upper one being centered on the small town of Vučje (which is not located on the river itself) while the center of the lower micro-region is the town of Leskovac. As it enters the region, the Veternica furthers away from the", "id": "11539774" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nthe west, Kukavica and Čemernik in the south and Babička Gora, Seličevica and Suva Planina to the east. The largest river in the region of Leskovac is the South Morava River, which flows south to north. Tributaries of the South Morava are: the Vlasina river, which collects water from Lake Vlasina and flows through Crna Trava and Vlasotince; the Veternica river, which flows through Leskovac; the Jablanica river, which springs from the foot of Goljak and flows through Medveđa and Lebane; the Pusta (Deserted) river,", "id": "2857704" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nof 590 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and is not navigable. The region of Pusta Reka mostly correspondence with the river's watershed. It is located between the Pasjača mountain and lower Toplica region (on the north), the Southern Pomoravlje (Field of Leskovac, on the east), the Jablanica region (on the south) and the Radan mountain (on the west). The region is an agricultural area, almost without any industry, except for some smaller facilities in regional center, Bojnik", "id": "12523581" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nof Podina, Voljčince, Badnjevac and the smaller regional center Žitorađa. After the Toplica reaches municipal center of Doljevac, it enters the most densely populated part of the south Pomoravlje, turns north and flows into the Južna Morava at the village of Orljane, across the medieval ruins of Kurvin grad, as Južna Morava's longest left tributary. The Toplica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its own drainage area of 2,217 km². The river is not navigable. The river valley is a major traffic route in southern Serbia as", "id": "19530454" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nThe Sokobanjska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Сокобањска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in central eastern Serbia, a 58 km-long right tributary to the Južna Morava river. The Sokobanjska Moravica originates from the eastern slopes of the Devica mountain, near the village of Skrobnica. The river flows to the north, turns westward at the village of Levovik and enters the Banja region. The rivers flows between the northern slopes of the Devica and Ozren mountains (on the south) and southern slopes of the Rtanj mountain", "id": "1726356" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\nmouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. As the wider Jabllanica region, Medveđa also had an Albanian majority. These Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces in a way that today would be characterized as ethnic cleansing. Due to depopulation and economic considerations some small numbers of Albanians were allowed to stay and return though not to their previous settlements and instead were designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of", "id": "7117787" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\n, a notable Muslim population existed in the districts of Niš, Pirot, Vranje, Leskovac, Prokuplje and Kuršumlija. The rural parts of Toplica, Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the", "id": "1099558" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nthe southernmost slopes of the Suva Planina and Babička Gora mountains, it reaches the town of Vlasotince and western parts of the low Leskovac field, part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. After the villages of Batulovce and Stajkovce, the Vlasina empties into the Južna Morava, east of the Leskovac's eastern suburb of Mrštane. The Vlasina drains an area of 991 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin and it is not navigable. On 26 June 1988, after a period of heavy rains, Vlasina was a", "id": "14981332" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nThe Pusta River ( / \"Pusta reka\", \"Desolate River\") is a river in southern Serbia, a 71-km long left tributary to the South Morava. It also gives the name to the Pusta Reka region in its valley. The river originates northeast of Prolom Banja, near the Sokolovica village, on the northern tip of the Radan mountain, as the \"Golema River\" (\"Big River\"). It flows eastward, between the mountains of Radan (to the south) and Pasjača (to the", "id": "12523579" }, { "contents": "Persecution of Muslims during Ottoman contraction\n\n\nReka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the Turks were of Albanian origin. The Muslims in the cities of Niš and Pirot were Turkish-speaking; Vranje and Leskovac were Turkish- and Albanian-speaking; Prokuplje", "id": "8891598" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nvalley between Konjic and Jablanica, known simply as \"Neretva\" since Middle Ages, the new point for hydrographical division became dam of the Jablanica HPP where also is a place of confluence of the rivers Neretva and Rama. Here the Neretva river suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before it reach town of Jablanica. From this point it turns again toward south and enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes of the mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica", "id": "12890350" }, { "contents": "Rama (Neretva)\n\n\nRama is a river in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a major tributary of the Neretva. It joins it from the right by discharging into Neretva's artificial reservoir, Jablaničko lake, at place called Marina Pećina, near village of Gračac, between location of underground powerhouse of Rama Hydroelectric Power Station and Jablanica Dam, depending on water level in Jablaničko lake, some 15 kilometers upstream from Jablanica. The Rama flows through municipalities of Prozor-Rama and Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, while its headwaters together with wellsprings in the region of", "id": "3052779" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\nThe Kolubara (Serbian Cyrillic: Колубара, ), is a long river in western Serbia; it is an eastern, right tributary to the Sava river. Kolubara is formed by the two small rivers Obnica and Jablanica. \"Obnica\" is the river in Western Serbia that springs at the foot of the mountain Medvednik. It flows to the East, through the villages of Suvodanje, Bobova, Majinović, Pričević and Zlatarić, and at the city of Valjevo meets the river \"Jablanica\" and forms Kolubara. The Obnica is", "id": "20109582" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\ndating to the 4th century AD lay at various locations of the town, as it was a transitory zone of Upper Moesia; travel and postal stations are among the finds. Toponyms such as \"Arbanaška\" and \"Đjake\" shows an Albanian presence in the Toplica and Southern Morava regions (located north-east of contemporary Kosovo) before the expulsion of Albanians during 1877–1878 period. The rural parts of Jablanica valley and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river", "id": "7117786" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\naverage elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva again expands into a third and largest valley which provided fertile agricultural land before it was flooded by large artificial reservoir, Jablaničko Lake, formed after construction of a Jablanica Dam near town of Jablanica. The second section begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before reaches town of Jablanica, from which point turns again toward south. From", "id": "12890343" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nLebane () is a town and municipality located in Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 10,062 inhabitants, while the municipality has 20,000 inhabitants. The town is located at the confluence of the rivers Jablanica and Šumanska Reka, in the alluvial plain created by the former. Just northeast of the town a larger plain called Leskovačko polje extends toward the town of Leskovac, which is the district seat. The elevation of the town of Lebane is between 275.2 and 420 MASL.", "id": "17523929" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nRakic writes about it as a \"\"big village populated by Serbs, in a valley, on the river Jablanica, on its left bank.\"\" Only when Lebane got the role of Jablanica district headquarters, it began to gradually develop in a direction of a small town. The core of this small town was a series of houses along the Jablanica which is 45m wide here (as is even now); at the end of this series are the buildings of the Court and Municipality. The main feature of", "id": "17523931" }, { "contents": "Štulac (Lebane)\n\n\nthe village of Prekopčelica. The village is located on the valley slopes of the Caričin Potok creek. It is scattered between the altitudes of . It is situated in the wider Pusta Reka region. The village rests on the western slopes of the , which here divides the regions of Pusta Reka and Jablanica. On the west, the easternmost slopes of the Radan mountain begin. The village area covers . The Slavs settled in the area in the 7th century, centering around the ruins of Iustiniana Prima. Due to the lack of", "id": "11151840" }, { "contents": "Grdelica\n\n\nGrdelica () is a town in southern Serbia. It is situated in the Leskovac municipality, in the Jablanica District. The total population of the town was 3,194 people as of the 2011 census. For census purposes, Grdelica is divided into two adjacent parts, southern \"Grdelica town\" (\"Grdelica varoš\"; population 2,136) and northern \"Grdelica village\" (\"Grdelica selo\"; 1,058). Grdelica lies at the South Morava river, on the mountainous terrain at the entrance of the Grdelica Gorge. It", "id": "460756" }, { "contents": "Gornji Bučumet\n\n\nall settlements registered separately in the census. The three settlements lie in the South Morava basin, above the Jablanica river, and as such are located in the Upper Jablanica region. The highest mountain in Upper Bučumet is Paramid (853), with the mountain of Sv. Petar (1149) being located in Middle Bučumet. The three neighbourhoods of Bučumet are 470 to 853 metres above sea level. There is a medieval church built on the ruins of an older church. During the Toplica-Jablanica Operation (, ) in", "id": "12752738" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nthe huge floods of its daughter river. The South Morava has 157 tributaries. The most important left tributaries are: Jablanica, Veternica, Pusta reka and Toplica. Right tributaries are: Vrla, Vlasina, Nišava (the longest) and Sokobanjska Moravica. The South Morava has a significant potential for electricity production, and a huge hydroelectrical system (Vlasina- Vrla I-IV power stations) has been constructed in its drainage basin. To a certain extent, its waters are used for irrigation. The river valley's most important role", "id": "15699476" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nThe Rasina () is a river in south central Serbia. The long river flows through the Rasina region, gives its name to the modern Rasina District of Serbia, and flows into the Zapadna Morava near the city of Kruševac. Its historical name is Arsen (Αρσεγα). The Rasina springs from the southern slopes of the Goč mountain, near the village of Rašovka, southwest of the most famous Serbian spa, Vrnjačka Banja. The river originally flows to the southeast, around the mountains of Željin and Kopaonik, next to", "id": "209716" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nLeskovac (Serbian Cyrillic: Лесковац, ) is a city and the administrative center of the Jablanica District in southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the city urban area has 60,288 inhabitants, while the city administrative area has 144,206. Traces of life of the Brnjica culture (8th century BC) is seen at the Hisar Hill (Hisar Leskovac) that was protected by a deep moat with a palisade on its inner side, a fortification similar to that of another fortification on the site near Zlokućane in the Velika Morava basin", "id": "2857693" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nThe favorable location and the richness of nature made Jablanica valley important place since the earliest times. Traffic affordable and fertile, Leskovac valley has provided favorable conditions for the settlement of population. Archaeological findings, of which the most important are Hissar and Caričin grad (Iustiniana Prima) show that life in this area, continuously evolved from prehistoric man to date. First mention of Lebane as Hlebane dates back to 1512. Lebane is formed as a village of the same name after the liberation in 1878. Visiting Serbia in 1880s, M.", "id": "17523930" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nThe South Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Јужна Морава, Serbian Latin: \"Južna Morava\", ; ) is a river in eastern Kosovo and in southern Serbia, which represents the shorter headwater of Great Morava. Today, it is 295 km long, including its source river Binačka Morava. It flows generally in the south to north direction, from Macedonian border to Kosovo and onwards to Central Serbia, where it meets West Morava at Stalać, to create Great Morava. The river rises in the Skopska Crna Gora mountain", "id": "15699471" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\nis the Rzav's longer headstream. It originates from the Čigota mountain, eastern section of the Zlatibor mountain. The river originally flows northward, next to the villages of Vodice and Jokina Ćuprija, reaches the central section of the Zlatibor where it is dammed and creates the artificial Ribnica lake (surface area of 10 km²), after the nearby village of Ribnica. After the lake, the river sharply turns west and soon gets followed by the parallel stream of the \"Jablanica\" river. After crossing the village of Mokra Gora", "id": "11540154" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\n25 km long. Jablanica originates on the eastern slopes of the Jablanik mountain, just few kilometers away from Obnica. It curves around Parač mountain and next to the village of Balinović, before it meets Obnica in Valjevo. Jablanica is 21.5 km long. This is also the beginning of the long region of the Kolubara valley, divided in two large parts, referred to as Upper (\"gornja\") Kolubara and Lower (\"donja\") Kolubara (around the Belgrade's suburb of Obrenovac). At Valjevo, the", "id": "20109583" }, { "contents": "Jablanica District\n\n\nThe Jablanica District (, ) is one of nine administrative districts of Southern and Eastern Serbia. It expands in the south-eastern parts of Serbia. According to the 2011 census results, it has a population of 215,463 inhabitants. The administrative center of the district is the city of Leskovac. The district encompasses the municipalities of: According to the 2011 census results, the Jablanica Distract has a total population of 216,304 inhabitants. Ethnic composition of the Jablanica District: Famous cultural-historic monuments in this District are: the Roman", "id": "13223854" }, { "contents": "Kalna, Crna Trava\n\n\nKalna () is a small village in the Crna Trava municipality of the Jablanica District of Serbia. Kalna village is an old Serbian village, 35 km away from the Crna Trava. It is located between Tumba and Serbian-Bulgarian border, at an altitude of 500 to 1100 m. The total area is rural area of 7285 hectares. The Kalna can be reached from three directions: The road in this way was there since the Turkish rule. It was the shortest connection of Leskovac valley (Dubočica) to Sofia and Constantinople", "id": "11211518" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina-Neretva Canton\n\n\ntook place there during World War II and there is a large museum in Jablanica dedicated to these battles. The Neretva river runs through the cities of Konjic, Jablanica, Mostar and Čapljina before it flows through Croatia and into the Adriatic Sea. There are large lakes in the canton such as the Jablanica lake located around the city Jablanica. The southern most municipality in the canton is the Neum municipality which borders the Adriatic sea and the eastern most municipality is the Ravno municipality along the border with Croatia. Of the ten cantons comprising", "id": "3225485" }, { "contents": "Vardar Corps\n\n\nThe Vardar Corps was a corps of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland (JVuO) that operated on the left bank of the river Vardar during the World War II in Yugoslavia on the territory of modern-day North Macedonia and southern Serbia. Its commander was former Captain of the Royal Guard of the Royal Yugoslav Army Stojan Krstić. It consisted of four brigades with total number of 1,000 soldiers. Together with Jablanica Corps, South Morava Corps and Flying Corps it belonged under \"Mountain Staff 110\" () located in Sijarinska Banja", "id": "11325997" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nthe villages of Mitrovo Polje, Bzenica, Pleš, Jablanica, Grčak, Toskići, Budilovina and Milentija. When the Rasina reaches the small town of Brus, it enters the upper Rasina region and continues next to the villages of Tršanovci, Lepenac and Razbojna. At this point the river reaches the western side of the Veliki Jastrebac mountain, and makes a wide, elbow turn to the north. In this part of the course, the Rasina also makes a southeast border of the Aleksandrovačka Župa region. After the villages of Bogiše", "id": "209717" }, { "contents": "Doljanka\n\n\nDoljanka is a right tributary of Neretva river in North Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The length of Doljanka is around 18 km and reaches an altitude drop of about 400 m. Arises from sources scattered type under the far northeast slopes of Vran mountain on altitude of 1324 m. It runs through limestone canyon, which is high up to 1,200 m and flows through the village of Doljani. Doljanka flows into the Neretva River between Jablanica and Mostar, at an altitude of 300 m. It is also the connection over which trouts from the Neretva", "id": "8874715" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nValley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Albanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje", "id": "17667163" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n. The Neretva then flows northwest, through Konjic. It enters the Jablanica Reservoir (\"Jablaničko jezero\"), one of the largest in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake ends near the town of Jablanica. From here on, the Neretva turns southward, continuing to the Adriatic Sea. With the mountains lining its shores gradually receding, the Neretva enters a valley where the city of Mostar lies. It flows under the old bridge (\"Stari most\") and continues, now wider, toward the town of Čapljina and", "id": "3021139" }, { "contents": "Radan (mountain)\n\n\nRadan (Serbian Cyrillic: Радан) is a mountain in southern Serbia, near the town of Kuršumlija. Its highest peak, Šopot, has an elevation of 1,408 meters above sea level. Radan separates the valleys of the Toplica and Jablanica rivers. It is well covered with deciduous and evergreen forests. The best known spot on Radan is the Devil's Town – a peculiar rock formation consisting of hundreds of mushroom-like posts, located on its southern slopes. Near the Devil's Town there are ruins of Ivanova kula –", "id": "3957176" }, { "contents": "Crni Timok\n\n\nкотлина, \"depression of Crna Reka\"), populated with many smaller villages (Lukovo, Jablanica, Valakonje, Savinac, Gamzigrad, Zvezdan). At Gamzigrad there is also an important archeological site from Roman times. After a flow of 84 km, the Crni Timok reaches Zaječar, where it joins the Beli Timok River, forming the Veliki Timok River. It drains an area of . Early in its course it receives from the right the Radovanska, Suva, Velika, Salešča, Šarbanovačka, Jasenova, Bajnska and Suva", "id": "11459489" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (mountain range)\n\n\nJablanica ( ; ) is a mountain range in Southern and Southeastern Europe, stretching north-south direction across the border of Albania and the Republic of North Macedonia. The long mountain ridge is higher than for approximately , while the highest part, located in its very center, is Black Stone at high. Both countries have 50% of the mountain, Albania the west and North Macedonia the east. Jablanica Mountain contains many large mountain lakes. Shebenik mountain is located just to the west of Jablanica and give name to the Shebenik", "id": "3232652" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nThe Vlasina (Serbian Cyrillic: Власина), is a river in southeastern Serbia, a 70 km-long outflow of the Vlasina Lake and a right tributary to the Južna Morava, which also gives its name to the surrounding Vlasina region. The Vlasina flows out from the Vlasina Lake at an altitude of 1,213 m. Lake used to be a large, muddy peat bog, but in 1947-51 the Vlasina was dammed by the long, earth dam and the bog was turned into an artificial lake. The river flows to", "id": "14981330" }, { "contents": "Desná (Morava)\n\n\nDesná () is a river situated in Olomouc region of Czech republic, left tributary of the Morava. It is 43.4 km long, and its basin area is 338 km. The Desná river originates at the confluence of Hučivá Desná and Divoká Desná in Kouty nad Desnou, the village situated in deep valley of High Ash Mountains. The Desná then goes southwest through a valley toward the town of Šumperk. After approximately 43.4 km, the Desná flows into the Morava river near Postřelmov village.The mean annual discharge at its mouth", "id": "20977814" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nSerbian forces then headed south into the Morava valley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Muslims fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Turks fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Muslims departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessalonika. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in", "id": "1099566" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n, in the center of the region. Other larger towns include Trebinje, Stolac, Široki Brijeg, Posušje, Ljubuški, Grude, Konjic, and Čapljina. Borders between Herzegovina and Bosnia are unclear and often disputed. The upper flow of the Neretva River lies in northern Herzegovina, a heavily forested area with fast-flowing rivers and high mountains. Konjic and Jablanica lie in this area. The Neretva rises on Lebršnik Mountain, close to the Montenegro border, and as the river flows west, it enters Herzegovina. The entire", "id": "3021137" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nUpper Neretva, of the Neretva river from its source at 1,227 m.a.s.l. and headwaters gorge all the way to the town of Konjic is 90 km, flows from south to north - north-west as most of the Bosnia and Herzegovina rivers belonging to the Danube watershed, and cover some 1,390 km with average elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva briefly expanding into a wide valley which provides fertile agricultural land. There exists a large Jablaničko Lake, artificially formed after construction of dam near Jablanica. \"Second", "id": "16797216" }, { "contents": "Kubršnica\n\n\nThe Kubršnica (Serbian Cyrillic: Кубршница) is a river in Šumadija region of central Serbia, a 42 km-long left and the longest tributary to the Jasenica river. The Kubršnica originates from the Venčac mountain, in the Jasenica sub-region of Šumadija, in the wider area of the town of Aranđelovac. The terrain in the source area of the river is rich in marble and fireclay. The river flows to the east, next to the Aranđelovac's suburb of Banja and turns north near Topola. After the villages", "id": "5629731" }, { "contents": "Peć Bistrica\n\n\nkm-long, Rugovo glacier. The gorge is sparsely inhabited (the village of Mali Štupelj). As it comes out of the gorge, the Peć Bistrica reaches the town of Peć and enters the bottom of the Metohija depression through which it flows for the rest of its course. It runs parallel to the flows of the White Drin to the north and the Dečanska Bistrica to the south, next to the villages of Goraždevac, Lješane, Jablanica, Drenovce and Zaimovo, before it empties into the White Drin south of", "id": "15886949" }, { "contents": "Zlatibor\n\n\nsylvestris\" var. \"zlatiborica\" is a subspecies of pine originating from the mountain, and is endangered today. A hill by the name of Cigla\",\" located near the nearby village of Jablanica, still has some borderline markings of the Kingdom of Serbia, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Zlatibor itself is located in the northern part of the Stari Vlah region, a historical border region between Raška, Herzegovina and Bosnia. It spreads over an area of , in length, southeast to northwest, and up", "id": "3906304" }, { "contents": "Serbian Christmas traditions\n\n\nhousehold. The members of the group were called \"koledari\". The \"koleda\" was carried out from the Feast of Saint Ignatius Theophorus (five days before Christmas) up until the Epiphany. This custom was best preserved in the upper Pčinja District, and in the region around the River South Morava in the Jablanica District, southeastern Serbia. Regarded as pagan and discouraged by the Serbian Orthodox Church, the \"koleda\" ceased to be performed among most of the Serbs during the 19th and 20th centuries. \"Koledari\"", "id": "20573743" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwere designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of Medveđa have small numbers of Albanians and their descendants remained. This was due to a local Ottoman Albanian commander Shahid Pasha from the Jablanica area negotiating on good terms with Prince Milan and thereby guaranteeing their presence. Some other Albanians such as merchants attempted to remain in Niš, but they left after murders occurred and their property was sold off at low values. In 1879, some Albanian refugees from", "id": "1099570" }, { "contents": "Kosovo Pomoravlje\n\n\nThe region's largest cities are Gjilan and Bujanovac. The region is known as \"Kosovsko Pomoravlje\" (Косовско Поморавље, \"Morava Valley of Kosovo\") in Serbian and as Lugina e Anamoraves Binçes (\"Valley of Binač Morava\") in Albanian. Its name is derived from the Binač Morava River, which flows through northern Macedonia, eastern Kosovo and southern Serbia as part of the Great Morava river system. The region includes part of the valley and the Karadak and Koznik mountains. Gjilan has six municipalities and 287 smaller", "id": "13339352" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nAlbanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje, with the intention of then turning west and", "id": "17667142" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\nThe Resavčina (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресавчина) is a river in Serbia, a 32 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. It is sometimes also called \"Resavica\" or \"Resava\" (not to be confused with another Velika Morava's right tributary of Resava or its own tributary of Resavica). The Resavčina originates near the village of Proštinac in Svilajnac municipality. The river originally flows to the north, but soon turns west at the village of Dubnica and enters the western half of the Veliko Pomoravlje region", "id": "4886222" }, { "contents": "Ibar (river)\n\n\nThe Ibar, also known as the Ibër and Ibri (, , ), is a river that flows through eastern Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, with a total length of . The river begins in the Hajla mountain, in Rožaje, eastern Montenegro, and passes through Kosovo to flow into the West Morava river near Kraljevo, central Serbia. It belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area is , with an average discharge of 60 m³/s at the mouth. It is not navigable. The Ibar originates from", "id": "4536148" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Ilirska Bistrica\n\n\nJablanica (; ) is a settlement southeast of Ilirska Bistrica in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. Jablanica is the site of three known mass graves or unmarked graves from the end of the Second World War. They all contain the remains of German soldiers from the 97th Corps that were killed at the beginning of May 1945. The Mountain Fields Mass Grave (), also known as the Mountain Mass Grave (), lies in a meadow about 1.6 km northeast of Jablanica and contains the remains of 10 soldiers. The Solne Mass", "id": "16911511" }, { "contents": "Čezsoča\n\n\nČezsoča (; ) is a settlement in the Municipality of Bovec in the Littoral region of Slovenia. It includes the hamlets of Gorenja Vas (), Dolenja Vas (), Jablanica, Kršovec, and Na Glavi. Čezsoča lies in the valley on the left bank of the Soča River. The terrain then rises up towards Mount Polovnik (1,480 m). East of the settlement is Humčič Hill (810 m), behind which rises Mount Javoršček (1,557 m). Oplenk Creek flows through the village between Gorenja Vas and", "id": "14920585" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nJablanica, the Neretva enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching in depth. Three hydroelectric dams operate between Jablanica and Mostar. When the Neretva expands for the second and final time, it reaches its third section. This area is often colloquially called the \"\"Bosnian and Herzegovinian California\"\". The last of its course forms wide alluvial delta, before the river empties into the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Tatinac (also known as the", "id": "12890344" }, { "contents": "Jablaničko lake\n\n\nJablaničko lake () is a large artificially formed lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva briefly expands into a wide valley. River provided lot of fertile, agricultural land there, before lake flooded most of it. The lake was created in 1953 after construction of Jablanica Dam near Jablanica in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake has an irregular elongated shape. Its width varies along its length. The lake is a popular vacation destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Swimming, boating and especially fishing are popular activities", "id": "13828307" }, { "contents": "Jablanica Dam\n\n\nThe Jablanica Dam is an arch-gravity dam on the Neretva River about northeast of Jablanica in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The dam was constructed between 1947 and 1955 with the primary purpose of hydroelectric power production. The power station was commissioned in two stages, from 1955 until 1958. The first generator was commissioned in February 1955. An upgrade in 2008 increased the installed capacity of the power station from 150 MW to 180 MW. The dam's power station is located about to the southeast near Jablanica", "id": "854706" }, { "contents": "Jablanik\n\n\nJablanik (Serbian Cyrillic: Јабланик) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Valjevo. Its highest peak \"Jablanik\" has an elevation of 1,275 meters(10001020_ above sea level. Jablanik is located at the source of the river Jablanica. It is separated from nearby Medvednik mountain by high pass Stolica, while the Debelo Brdo saddle separates it from Povlen in the southeast. The highest peak has the same name as the mountain itself - Jablanik, and is 1,275 m high. The hills around the peak are mainly", "id": "366162" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\nThe Nišava or Nishava (Bulgarian and , ) is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia, a right tributary, and with a length of 218 km also the longest one, of the South Morava. The Nišava originates in western Bulgaria, in the Stara Planina mountains (east of Kom Peak) near the village of Gintsi. Its source is close to the Serbian border. It enters Serbia after 67 km of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries. Because it flows through Gintsi, the upper course of the river is", "id": "9627075" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nAfter Mramorac village, the Jasenica spills over in several parallel flows, which continue until its confluence. After the Pridvorica and Vodice villages (on different arms of the river), the Jasenica reaches the town of Smederevska Palanka, the most populous settlement in its valley. This is also where the Kubršnica, its main tributary, flows into it from the left. The Jasenica then gently bends to the east, flowing into the Great Morava near the village of Veliko Orašje (the southern arm of the river flows through the town", "id": "3481502" }, { "contents": "Gruža (river)\n\n\nThe Gruža (Serbian Cyrillic: Гружа, ) is a river in central Serbia. The river is a 62 km long left tributary to the Zapadna Morava. The Gruža originates in the central part of the Rudnik mountain, right under the mountain's main settlement, the village of Rudnik, northeast of the town of Gornji Milanovac, central Serbia. The river flows south next to the village of Majdan, around the Rudnik mountain into the Takovo region and at the village of Nevade, just few kilometers away from Gornji Milanovac,", "id": "10971320" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\n(hamlet Panjak) on the Serbian-Bosnian border Crni Rzav meets the Jablanica river at the village Gornje Vardište and finally the river Beli Rzav at the village of Donje Vardište. The Rzav continues as the natural extension of the Beli Rzav, but since the Black Rzav is longer, the latter is considered to be the main headstream. It floes between the southernmost part of the Zvijezda mountain (\"Ponos\" peak) from the north and the Suha Gora mountain from the south, next to the villages of Prosjek (and", "id": "11540155" }, { "contents": "Ub (river)\n\n\nThe Ub (Serbian Cyrillic: Уб) is a river in western Serbia, a 57 km-long right and longest tributary to Tamnava river. The Ub originates from the Vlašić mountain in Podgorina region of west Serbia, near the village of Kasapo. From its source to the mouth, the river flows to the east, parallel to the river Tamnava, which it will eventually join. The villages located in the upper section of the river's flow are Družetić, Pambukovica and Čučuge, where the Ub slightly turns to the", "id": "2261401" }, { "contents": "Olomouc Region\n\n\nof the region is situated on the water level of the Morava River near to Kojetín in the Přerov District (190 m above sea level). The Morava river flows through the region and the majority of the region's territory belongs to Morava’s drainage basin. A small northern part of the region belongs to the drainage basin of Odra River, which flows to the Baltic Sea. The Olomouc Region offers a great variety of natural points of interest. Protected landscape area of the Jeseníky mountains offers a number of scenic places such", "id": "11419394" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina\n\n\nJablanica is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is situated on the Neretva river and Jablanica lake. The municipality of Jablanica is a major tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The municipality offer a wide variety of activities. The surrounding mountains such as Plasa, Čvrsnica and Prenj offer both hunting grounds and a variety of hiking trails. One popular hiking destination is \"Hajdučka Vrata\", a natural wonder, the product of wind", "id": "9009264" }, { "contents": "Krupá (Morava)\n\n\nKrupá (German: Graupa Bach) is a creek in Šumperk District, Moravia, left tributary of the Morava. Its length is 19,2 km and its drainage basin covers 112.7 km2. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 4.48 m³/s. The Krupá originates in Czech part of the Śnieżnik Mountains, 400 meters above sea level. The Krupá then goes south toward the town of Staré Město. It flows into the Morava river near Hanušovice town. River keeps its natural character with meanders and original riversides. A river bottom is", "id": "1745557" }, { "contents": "Oskava (river)\n\n\nOskava is a river in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic, left tributary of the Morava river. Its length is 50.3 km and its drainage basin covers 569 km. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 3.53 m/s. The Oskava originates from southeast slope of Kamenná hora in Hrubý Jeseník, 215 meters above sea level. The river is surrounded by woods in upper reaches, flows through hills of Nízký Jeseník in middle reaches and its lower reaches is situated in swampy floodplain of Litovelské Pomoraví Protected Landscape Area.", "id": "8538845" }, { "contents": "Crna Trava\n\n\nCrna Trava ( ) is a village and municipality located in the Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to 2011 census, the population of the village is 434 inhabitants, while population of the municipality is 1,663. This is the smallest by population and poorest municipality in Serbia. Crna Trava is famous for its migrant builders, who are considered the best in the region and are colloquially described as \"building half of Yugoslavia\". The name of the village in Serbian translates to \"Black Grass\". The origin of the name", "id": "18032485" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\n. At the village of Kušiljevo, the river receives the small stream of \"Beljeva\" from the left and turns northward, which is the general direction of its course for the rest of the flow. The river flows parallel to the Velika Morava river as its satellite flow, in the Morava's floodplain, so there are no settlements on the Resavica itself, but several large villages are located in its valley (Porodin, Žabari, Simićevo, Aleksandrovac Požarevački, Vlaški Do, Poljana), all of them located on the", "id": "4886223" }, { "contents": "Lugomir\n\n\nThe Lugomir (Serbian Cyrillic: Лугомир) is a river in central Serbia, a 57 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. The Lugomir originates from two headstreams, the Dulenska reka and the Županjevačka reka. The shorter headstream of Županjevačka reka (Cyrillic: \"Жупањевачка река\") originates from the mountain of Gledićke planine in southern Šumadija region of central Serbia. Its spring is just some 500 m away from the source of Lugomir's another headstream, the Dulenska reka. The river first flows to the east", "id": "5130918" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\ncities in Serbia, 10 km after which the Nišava empties into the Južna Morava. However, with the rapid growth of Niš in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs, the banks of the Nišava are urbanized almost to its mouth. After being divided into districts in 1992, the Nišava District (with Niš as administrative center) is named after the river. The river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area covers 4,086 km, of which about 73% in Serbia, the rest in Bulgaria", "id": "9627077" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nsection\" begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama river between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes a southern course and enter a largest canyons of its course, running through steep slopes of magnificent mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching 800–1200 meters in depth. From here Neretva flows toward the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Jezernica (also Tatinac), the Gornji and Donji Krupac, the Ljuta-Dindolka, the Jesenica, the Bjelimićka Rijeka, the Slatinica, the Račica, the Rakitnica, the Konjička", "id": "16797217" }, { "contents": "Resava (river)\n\n\nThe Resava (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресава) is a river in central Serbia, a 65 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava. It also gives the name to the surrounding Resava region, the Resava Monastery, the coal mines in its valley and a popular tourist destination of Resava Cave. The Resava originates from the Homolje region in eastern Serbia. It springs out at an altitude of 1,100 m and flows westward between the mountains of Beljanica (on the north) and Kučaj (on the south). In its", "id": "15040274" }, { "contents": "A1 motorway (Serbia)\n\n\nJužna Morava river. Southern section (Niš–Leskovac–Vranje–Macedonian border) consists of 128 km that are in service, while additional 26 km are under construction. Construction of southern section has been completed by May 2019, and last sections opened for traffic on 18 May 2019: Highway passes through valley of South Morava, passes west of Niš, by Merošina and Leskovac, and after Grdelica built highway ends. 26 kilometers of highway under construction passes through Grdelica gorge, very difficult terrain. This sections is often considered", "id": "1785427" }, { "contents": "Čivelj\n\n\nČivelj is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in the municipality of Jablanica, Herzegovina-Neretva Canton, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1991, the village had six inhabitants, all of whom were Muslims. In 2013, Čivelj had 10 inhabitants. Tourism is solid. Civelj is placed 8 kilometres from Jablanica and it is placed on Jablanica lake. In lake there are 5 types of fishes including the most popular \"pastrmka\". The village was found in 1911. by local fishermen. Near Civelj", "id": "4645021" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nAlthough these streams are of low outflow, there are also numerous wellsprings rising on both sides of the canyon at the river banks, with high-capacity discharge. Three large hydroelectric power stations operate in this section of the Neretva, between Jablanica and Mostar, namely Grabovica HPP, Salakovac HPP and Mostar HPP. Jablanica lake is a large artificial lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva expands into a wide valley. The river provided fertile, agricultural land before the lake flooded most of it. The lake", "id": "12890353" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nThe Jasenica (Serbian Cyrillic: Јасеница, ) is a river in central Serbia. It is long and is the left tributary of the Great Morava. This river gives the name to the surrounding region. The Jasenica originates from several streams, most notably the Đurinci (Cyrillic: Ђуринци) from Venčac mountain, and the Srebrenica (Cyrillic: Сребреница) from the northern slopes of the Rudnik mountain in central Serbia. At its origin, the river runs through the eastern border of the Kačer region. It flows to the southeast", "id": "3481500" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nin north Skopje, Macedonia. The streams Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is, after passing the Macedonian-Serbian border, known as the Binačka Morava. After 49 km it meets the Preševska Moravica at Bujanovac, and for the remainder, 246 km, flows as the South Morava. The South Morava belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and its own drainage area is 15,696 km², of which 1,237 km² is in Bulgaria (through its right tributary Nišava). Its average", "id": "15699472" }, { "contents": "Pešter\n\n\nRivers Uvac, Vapa, Jablanica and Grabovica flow through the plateau. In the geologic past, the field was a large lake, of which only a small Sjenica lake near the village of Tuzinje remained. The soil is mostly karst interspersed with pastures. Economy of the area relies primarily on cattle breeding, chiefly sheep. Pešter is famous for its dairy products, especially the \"Sjenica cheese\" (\"Sjenički sir\"), as well as lamb and prosciutto. The plateau is sparsely populated: most settlements are on the", "id": "16748290" }, { "contents": "Sredačka župa\n\n\nSredačka Župa (; \"county of Sredska\") is a remote geographical region, a valley, in southeastern Kosovo, below the Šar Mountains at the source of the Prizrenska Bistrica. The region, an oval basin, lies below the Šar Mountains, at the source, upper stream of the Prizrenska Bistrica (\"Prizren river\"). South of the region between the Prizren mountains and Koritnik mountain, lies the Gora region. It currently includes Sredska, Pousko, Jablanica, Lokvica, Rečane, Živinjane, Planjane, Nebregošte,", "id": "13372292" }, { "contents": "Binačka Morava\n\n\nBinačka Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Биначка Морава; ) or (\"Mirusha\") is a river which flows in southeastern Kosovo and North Macedonia. It flows generally in the southwest to northeast direction, from Macedonian border to Bujanovac, where, after 49 km, meets Preševska Moravica, to create South Morava. The river begins in the mountain of Skopska Crna Gora, in North Macedonia, north of its capital Skopje. Streams of Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is,", "id": "12867615" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwar, the Albanian population depending on the area reacted differently to incoming Serbian forces by either offering resistance or fleeing toward nearby mountains and Ottoman Kosovo. Although most of these Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces, a small presence was allowed to remain in the Jablanica valley where their descendants live today. Serbs from Lab moved to Serbia during and after the first round of hostilities in 1876, while incoming Albanian refugees thereafter 1878 repopulated their villages. Albanian refugees also settled alongside the north-eastern Ottoman-Serbian border, in urban areas", "id": "1099553" }, { "contents": "Banjska River\n\n\nThe Banjska River ( / \"Banjska reka\", \"Baths River\"), is a river in southern Serbia, the right tributary of Toplica in which it flows near Kuršumlija. It rises under the far south-eastern branch of Kopaonik. It is 22 km long, with a river basin area of 155 km². The average flow at the mouth is 0,7 m³/s. The valley of the river is mostly ravines, while the basin is rich in forest. The Kuršumlija-Kuršumlijska Banja-Prepolac Pass-Podujevo-", "id": "14979528" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nby a catastrophic flood. Then unregulated river Jablanica, swollen after a long rainy period, broke on June 6, spilled out of its banks and caused enormous material damage Lebane. Flood toll was paid and human victims (killed two people). After this tragic event, with financial help, Lebane begins to industrialize faster, and the process of industrialization has caused more versatile and faster development of the city. According to the 2011 census, the municipality has 22,000 inhabitants. The ethnic composition of the municipality: The following table", "id": "17523935" }, { "contents": "Čvrsnica\n\n\nČvrsnica () is a mountain in the Dinarides of Bosnia and Herzegovina, located in northern Herzegovina, most of the mountain is located in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton municipalities of Mostar and Jablanica while the smaller part of the mountain, around 10% is located in the municipality of Posušje. The highest peak (Pločno) is 2228 metres. Čvrsnica is surrounded by the river Neretva from the east (20 km), its tributaries Doljanka (18 km) from the north and Drežanka (19.8 km) from the south,", "id": "6129606" }, { "contents": "Myjava (river)\n\n\nThe Myjava River is a river in western Slovakia and for a small part in the Czech Republic and left tributary of the Morava River. It rises in the White Carpathians near the village of Nová Lhota in Moravia, but crosses the Czech-Slovak border shortly afterwards and flows in a southern direction until the town of Myjava, where it enters the Myjava Hills and turns west. Near Sobotište it flows into the Záhorie Lowland and turns south until the village of Jablonica, turning northwest and from Senica it flows west, passing through", "id": "2099838" }, { "contents": "West Morava\n\n\nSouth and Great Morava's meridian (south-to-north) flow, the West Morava runs in an opposed, latitudinal (west-to-east) direction, dividing the region of Šumadija of the central Serbia from the southern parts of the country. Due to the West Morava's direction, it flows between many mountains, regions and sub-regions: The West Morava river valley, Zapadno Pomoravlje, is economically the most developed of all three Morava river valleys. With the valley of the Ibar, the West", "id": "7786624" }, { "contents": "Ralja (river)\n\n\nThe Ralja () is a river in Šumadija region of Serbia, a 51 km long left tributary to the Jezava, a tributary of the Great Morava river. It also gives its name to the surrounding Šumadija's subregion of Ralja. The Ralja originates from the northern part of the Kosmaj mountain, north of the village of Velika Ivanča, in the Sopot municipality of the City of Belgrade. Almost from the source, the river valley is a route for the Belgrade-Niš railway. At the villages of Popović and Mali", "id": "2491229" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nBovan gorge carved by the river and is very popular local and regional tourist destination, especially among campers and fishermen, but the coastline is not put in order. The river continues to the south, in an inverse flow, and after the villages of Subotinac and Kraljevo, it empties into the Južna Morava at the town of Aleksinac. The lower section used to be a coal mining area too, just like the upper one, but the mines (Aleksinački Rudnik) are closed now. The Sokobanjska Moravica brlongs to the Black", "id": "1726358" }, { "contents": "Golijska Moravica\n\n\nThe Golijska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Голијска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in western Serbia. With a length of 98 km, it is the longer headstream of the Zapadna Morava (it forms it with the Đetinja), and thus, of the Velika Morava. Its name, Moravica, means \"little Morava\" in Serbian, and it also gives its name to the surrounding region and the modern Moravica District of Serbia. The Golijska Moravica originates from the western slopes of the Golija mountain and flows", "id": "5380325" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\n. The Nišava is not navigable. It is not only the longest tributary of the Južna Morava, but also the largest one in terms of discharge (36 km/s). It has many smaller tributaries, the most important being the Temštica from the right, and the Jerma (or Sukovska reka), Crvena reka, Koritnička reka and Kutinska reka from the left. The Nišava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia: the route follows the valleys of the Morava", "id": "9627078" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nThe Toplica (Serbian Cyrillic: Топлица, ) is a river in southern Serbia. The river is 130 km long and gives its name to the region it flows through, which constitutes most of the modern Toplica District of Serbia. The Toplica originates under the name of \"Duboka\" from the eastern slopes of the Kopaonik mountain, just south of the highest peak, Pančićev vrh. It flows to the southeast, on the western slopes of the Lepa Gora mountain, next to the villages of Merćez, Selova, Žuč,", "id": "19530451" }, { "contents": "Great Morava\n\n\nof the Velika Morava's right tributary Resava). The average discharge of the Velika Morava on its confluence with Danube is 255 m³/s (120 m³/s brought by Zapadna Morava, 100 m³/s by Južna Morava, and 35 m³/s amounted by the Velika Morava itself). Tributaries of the Velika Morava are short, the longest one being the Jasenica (79 km) and others rarely exceeding 50 km. Right tributaries are: Jovanovačka reka, Crnica, Ravanica, Resava and Resavica (or Resavčina). Left tributaries are more numerous,", "id": "2295702" }, { "contents": "Vevčani\n\n\nVevčani () is a village in the Republic of North Macedonia. It is the only settlement and seat of Vevčani Municipality. The village of Vevčani is found in the southwestern range at the foot of the Jablanica mountain range. It is situated from 800 – 950 metres above sea level. The village is located 14 km North-West of the town of Struga. The village is situated near the villages of Oktisi, Velešta, Podgorci, Gorna Belica with the Albanian border to the West of the village. The famous Vevčani", "id": "5042995" } ]
The Jablanica ( Serbian : Јабланица , ) is an river in southern Serbia . A left tributary of the South ( or Južna ) Morava river , it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia 's Jablanica District , with the region contributing about one third of the district 's area . The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain , near the village of Grbavce , on the administrative border of the Kosovo province . The area is rich in thermal springs , so several spas are located near the river : Stara Banja , Ravna Banja and Sijarina with popular Sijarinska Banja . At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary Čokotinska reka ( Cyrillic : Чокотинска река ) , turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point . The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the and Radan mountains , in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the in Kosovo . The river flows eastward , passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo , before reaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac , part of the depression of Leskovac , which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava . In the region , near Lebane , a famed archeological find of ( Iustiniana Prima ) is located . The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo , Vranovce , Bošnjace , Turekovac and Stopanje , reaches Vinarce , the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac , and turns north . First it flows parallel to the Veternica river , to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje , then parallel to the Južna Morava . After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava . From Pečenjevce , a parallel flow ( canal ) begins , connecting the Jablanica and s , some 15 km to the north . Through Južna Morava , the Jablanica belongs to the [START_ENT] Black Sea [END_ENT] drainage basin , draining an area of 895 km ² itself . It 's not navigable and has an average discharge of 6 m ³ / s , which in rainy years grows much higher , so the river floods its valley causing lots of material damage . The name of the river , Jablanica , in Serbian means the
52456da4-be9c-4163-a031-585f1d52dcb2_river:16
[{"answer": "Black Sea", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "3386", "title": "Black Sea"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nreaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac, part of the depression of Leskovac, which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. In the region, near Lebane, a famed archeological find of Caričin grad (\"Iustiniana Prima\") is located. The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo, Vranovce, Bošnjace, Turekovac and Stopanje, reaches Vinarce, the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac", "id": "3481303" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\n, and turns north. First it flows parallel to the Veternica river, to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje, then parallel to the Južna Morava. After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava. From Pečenjevce, a parallel flow (canal) begins, connecting the Jablanica and Toplica rivers, some 15 km to the north. Through Južna Morava, the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, draining an area of itself. It's not navigable", "id": "3481304" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\npopular Sijarinska Banja. At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary \"Čokotinska reka\" (Cyrillic: \"Чокотинска река\"), turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point. The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the Majdan and Radan mountains, in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the District of Priština in Kosovo. The river flows eastward, passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo, before", "id": "3481302" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nThe Jablanica (, ) is an river in southern Serbia. A left tributary of the South (or Južna) Morava river, it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia's Jablanica District, with the region contributing about one third of the district's area. The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain, near the village of Grbavce, on the border with Kosovo. The area is rich in thermal springs, so several spas are located near the river: Stara Banja, Ravna Banja and Sijarina with", "id": "3481301" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nJablanica with third parallel flow, the \"Sušica\", being formed in between. Settlements include many small villages, like Vina, Bukova Gora, Miroševce, Žabljane, Beli Potok and Strojkovce. In the Leskovac field, the river gently turns north, receives the Sušica from the left and reaches the town of Leskovac. The Veternica continues northward, being connected to the Jablanica river by the canal at the village of Bogojevce, before it empties into the Južna Morava. The Veternica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its", "id": "11539775" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nThe Veternica (Serbian Cyrillic: Ветерница, ) is a river in southern Serbia, a 75 km long left tributary to the Južna Morava, which gives the name to the region surrounding its valley. The Veternica originates from the Grot peak, the southernmost part of the Kukavica mountain. Four smaller streams meet at the village of Vlase and continue to the north as the Veternica. The river flows next to the villages of Golemo Selo, Oštra Glava and Gagince, where it flows parallel to the Jablanica river. As the Veternica", "id": "11539773" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nbends to the northeast, it enters the low Veternica region, part of the Leskovac field in the composite valley of the Južna Morava. Small region, located between the Kukavica mountain on the south and the Jablanica region on the north, is divided in two micro-regions, upper one being centered on the small town of Vučje (which is not located on the river itself) while the center of the lower micro-region is the town of Leskovac. As it enters the region, the Veternica furthers away from the", "id": "11539774" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nthe west, Kukavica and Čemernik in the south and Babička Gora, Seličevica and Suva Planina to the east. The largest river in the region of Leskovac is the South Morava River, which flows south to north. Tributaries of the South Morava are: the Vlasina river, which collects water from Lake Vlasina and flows through Crna Trava and Vlasotince; the Veternica river, which flows through Leskovac; the Jablanica river, which springs from the foot of Goljak and flows through Medveđa and Lebane; the Pusta (Deserted) river,", "id": "2857704" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nof 590 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and is not navigable. The region of Pusta Reka mostly correspondence with the river's watershed. It is located between the Pasjača mountain and lower Toplica region (on the north), the Southern Pomoravlje (Field of Leskovac, on the east), the Jablanica region (on the south) and the Radan mountain (on the west). The region is an agricultural area, almost without any industry, except for some smaller facilities in regional center, Bojnik", "id": "12523581" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nof Podina, Voljčince, Badnjevac and the smaller regional center Žitorađa. After the Toplica reaches municipal center of Doljevac, it enters the most densely populated part of the south Pomoravlje, turns north and flows into the Južna Morava at the village of Orljane, across the medieval ruins of Kurvin grad, as Južna Morava's longest left tributary. The Toplica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its own drainage area of 2,217 km². The river is not navigable. The river valley is a major traffic route in southern Serbia as", "id": "19530454" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nThe Sokobanjska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Сокобањска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in central eastern Serbia, a 58 km-long right tributary to the Južna Morava river. The Sokobanjska Moravica originates from the eastern slopes of the Devica mountain, near the village of Skrobnica. The river flows to the north, turns westward at the village of Levovik and enters the Banja region. The rivers flows between the northern slopes of the Devica and Ozren mountains (on the south) and southern slopes of the Rtanj mountain", "id": "1726356" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\nmouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. As the wider Jabllanica region, Medveđa also had an Albanian majority. These Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces in a way that today would be characterized as ethnic cleansing. Due to depopulation and economic considerations some small numbers of Albanians were allowed to stay and return though not to their previous settlements and instead were designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of", "id": "7117787" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\n, a notable Muslim population existed in the districts of Niš, Pirot, Vranje, Leskovac, Prokuplje and Kuršumlija. The rural parts of Toplica, Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the", "id": "1099558" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nthe southernmost slopes of the Suva Planina and Babička Gora mountains, it reaches the town of Vlasotince and western parts of the low Leskovac field, part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. After the villages of Batulovce and Stajkovce, the Vlasina empties into the Južna Morava, east of the Leskovac's eastern suburb of Mrštane. The Vlasina drains an area of 991 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin and it is not navigable. On 26 June 1988, after a period of heavy rains, Vlasina was a", "id": "14981332" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nThe Pusta River ( / \"Pusta reka\", \"Desolate River\") is a river in southern Serbia, a 71-km long left tributary to the South Morava. It also gives the name to the Pusta Reka region in its valley. The river originates northeast of Prolom Banja, near the Sokolovica village, on the northern tip of the Radan mountain, as the \"Golema River\" (\"Big River\"). It flows eastward, between the mountains of Radan (to the south) and Pasjača (to the", "id": "12523579" }, { "contents": "Persecution of Muslims during Ottoman contraction\n\n\nReka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the Turks were of Albanian origin. The Muslims in the cities of Niš and Pirot were Turkish-speaking; Vranje and Leskovac were Turkish- and Albanian-speaking; Prokuplje", "id": "8891598" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nvalley between Konjic and Jablanica, known simply as \"Neretva\" since Middle Ages, the new point for hydrographical division became dam of the Jablanica HPP where also is a place of confluence of the rivers Neretva and Rama. Here the Neretva river suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before it reach town of Jablanica. From this point it turns again toward south and enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes of the mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica", "id": "12890350" }, { "contents": "Rama (Neretva)\n\n\nRama is a river in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a major tributary of the Neretva. It joins it from the right by discharging into Neretva's artificial reservoir, Jablaničko lake, at place called Marina Pećina, near village of Gračac, between location of underground powerhouse of Rama Hydroelectric Power Station and Jablanica Dam, depending on water level in Jablaničko lake, some 15 kilometers upstream from Jablanica. The Rama flows through municipalities of Prozor-Rama and Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, while its headwaters together with wellsprings in the region of", "id": "3052779" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\nThe Kolubara (Serbian Cyrillic: Колубара, ), is a long river in western Serbia; it is an eastern, right tributary to the Sava river. Kolubara is formed by the two small rivers Obnica and Jablanica. \"Obnica\" is the river in Western Serbia that springs at the foot of the mountain Medvednik. It flows to the East, through the villages of Suvodanje, Bobova, Majinović, Pričević and Zlatarić, and at the city of Valjevo meets the river \"Jablanica\" and forms Kolubara. The Obnica is", "id": "20109582" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\ndating to the 4th century AD lay at various locations of the town, as it was a transitory zone of Upper Moesia; travel and postal stations are among the finds. Toponyms such as \"Arbanaška\" and \"Đjake\" shows an Albanian presence in the Toplica and Southern Morava regions (located north-east of contemporary Kosovo) before the expulsion of Albanians during 1877–1878 period. The rural parts of Jablanica valley and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river", "id": "7117786" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\naverage elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva again expands into a third and largest valley which provided fertile agricultural land before it was flooded by large artificial reservoir, Jablaničko Lake, formed after construction of a Jablanica Dam near town of Jablanica. The second section begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before reaches town of Jablanica, from which point turns again toward south. From", "id": "12890343" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nLebane () is a town and municipality located in Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 10,062 inhabitants, while the municipality has 20,000 inhabitants. The town is located at the confluence of the rivers Jablanica and Šumanska Reka, in the alluvial plain created by the former. Just northeast of the town a larger plain called Leskovačko polje extends toward the town of Leskovac, which is the district seat. The elevation of the town of Lebane is between 275.2 and 420 MASL.", "id": "17523929" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nRakic writes about it as a \"\"big village populated by Serbs, in a valley, on the river Jablanica, on its left bank.\"\" Only when Lebane got the role of Jablanica district headquarters, it began to gradually develop in a direction of a small town. The core of this small town was a series of houses along the Jablanica which is 45m wide here (as is even now); at the end of this series are the buildings of the Court and Municipality. The main feature of", "id": "17523931" }, { "contents": "Štulac (Lebane)\n\n\nthe village of Prekopčelica. The village is located on the valley slopes of the Caričin Potok creek. It is scattered between the altitudes of . It is situated in the wider Pusta Reka region. The village rests on the western slopes of the , which here divides the regions of Pusta Reka and Jablanica. On the west, the easternmost slopes of the Radan mountain begin. The village area covers . The Slavs settled in the area in the 7th century, centering around the ruins of Iustiniana Prima. Due to the lack of", "id": "11151840" }, { "contents": "Grdelica\n\n\nGrdelica () is a town in southern Serbia. It is situated in the Leskovac municipality, in the Jablanica District. The total population of the town was 3,194 people as of the 2011 census. For census purposes, Grdelica is divided into two adjacent parts, southern \"Grdelica town\" (\"Grdelica varoš\"; population 2,136) and northern \"Grdelica village\" (\"Grdelica selo\"; 1,058). Grdelica lies at the South Morava river, on the mountainous terrain at the entrance of the Grdelica Gorge. It", "id": "460756" }, { "contents": "Gornji Bučumet\n\n\nall settlements registered separately in the census. The three settlements lie in the South Morava basin, above the Jablanica river, and as such are located in the Upper Jablanica region. The highest mountain in Upper Bučumet is Paramid (853), with the mountain of Sv. Petar (1149) being located in Middle Bučumet. The three neighbourhoods of Bučumet are 470 to 853 metres above sea level. There is a medieval church built on the ruins of an older church. During the Toplica-Jablanica Operation (, ) in", "id": "12752738" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nthe huge floods of its daughter river. The South Morava has 157 tributaries. The most important left tributaries are: Jablanica, Veternica, Pusta reka and Toplica. Right tributaries are: Vrla, Vlasina, Nišava (the longest) and Sokobanjska Moravica. The South Morava has a significant potential for electricity production, and a huge hydroelectrical system (Vlasina- Vrla I-IV power stations) has been constructed in its drainage basin. To a certain extent, its waters are used for irrigation. The river valley's most important role", "id": "15699476" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nThe Rasina () is a river in south central Serbia. The long river flows through the Rasina region, gives its name to the modern Rasina District of Serbia, and flows into the Zapadna Morava near the city of Kruševac. Its historical name is Arsen (Αρσεγα). The Rasina springs from the southern slopes of the Goč mountain, near the village of Rašovka, southwest of the most famous Serbian spa, Vrnjačka Banja. The river originally flows to the southeast, around the mountains of Željin and Kopaonik, next to", "id": "209716" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nLeskovac (Serbian Cyrillic: Лесковац, ) is a city and the administrative center of the Jablanica District in southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the city urban area has 60,288 inhabitants, while the city administrative area has 144,206. Traces of life of the Brnjica culture (8th century BC) is seen at the Hisar Hill (Hisar Leskovac) that was protected by a deep moat with a palisade on its inner side, a fortification similar to that of another fortification on the site near Zlokućane in the Velika Morava basin", "id": "2857693" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nThe favorable location and the richness of nature made Jablanica valley important place since the earliest times. Traffic affordable and fertile, Leskovac valley has provided favorable conditions for the settlement of population. Archaeological findings, of which the most important are Hissar and Caričin grad (Iustiniana Prima) show that life in this area, continuously evolved from prehistoric man to date. First mention of Lebane as Hlebane dates back to 1512. Lebane is formed as a village of the same name after the liberation in 1878. Visiting Serbia in 1880s, M.", "id": "17523930" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nThe South Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Јужна Морава, Serbian Latin: \"Južna Morava\", ; ) is a river in eastern Kosovo and in southern Serbia, which represents the shorter headwater of Great Morava. Today, it is 295 km long, including its source river Binačka Morava. It flows generally in the south to north direction, from Macedonian border to Kosovo and onwards to Central Serbia, where it meets West Morava at Stalać, to create Great Morava. The river rises in the Skopska Crna Gora mountain", "id": "15699471" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\nis the Rzav's longer headstream. It originates from the Čigota mountain, eastern section of the Zlatibor mountain. The river originally flows northward, next to the villages of Vodice and Jokina Ćuprija, reaches the central section of the Zlatibor where it is dammed and creates the artificial Ribnica lake (surface area of 10 km²), after the nearby village of Ribnica. After the lake, the river sharply turns west and soon gets followed by the parallel stream of the \"Jablanica\" river. After crossing the village of Mokra Gora", "id": "11540154" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\n25 km long. Jablanica originates on the eastern slopes of the Jablanik mountain, just few kilometers away from Obnica. It curves around Parač mountain and next to the village of Balinović, before it meets Obnica in Valjevo. Jablanica is 21.5 km long. This is also the beginning of the long region of the Kolubara valley, divided in two large parts, referred to as Upper (\"gornja\") Kolubara and Lower (\"donja\") Kolubara (around the Belgrade's suburb of Obrenovac). At Valjevo, the", "id": "20109583" }, { "contents": "Jablanica District\n\n\nThe Jablanica District (, ) is one of nine administrative districts of Southern and Eastern Serbia. It expands in the south-eastern parts of Serbia. According to the 2011 census results, it has a population of 215,463 inhabitants. The administrative center of the district is the city of Leskovac. The district encompasses the municipalities of: According to the 2011 census results, the Jablanica Distract has a total population of 216,304 inhabitants. Ethnic composition of the Jablanica District: Famous cultural-historic monuments in this District are: the Roman", "id": "13223854" }, { "contents": "Kalna, Crna Trava\n\n\nKalna () is a small village in the Crna Trava municipality of the Jablanica District of Serbia. Kalna village is an old Serbian village, 35 km away from the Crna Trava. It is located between Tumba and Serbian-Bulgarian border, at an altitude of 500 to 1100 m. The total area is rural area of 7285 hectares. The Kalna can be reached from three directions: The road in this way was there since the Turkish rule. It was the shortest connection of Leskovac valley (Dubočica) to Sofia and Constantinople", "id": "11211518" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina-Neretva Canton\n\n\ntook place there during World War II and there is a large museum in Jablanica dedicated to these battles. The Neretva river runs through the cities of Konjic, Jablanica, Mostar and Čapljina before it flows through Croatia and into the Adriatic Sea. There are large lakes in the canton such as the Jablanica lake located around the city Jablanica. The southern most municipality in the canton is the Neum municipality which borders the Adriatic sea and the eastern most municipality is the Ravno municipality along the border with Croatia. Of the ten cantons comprising", "id": "3225485" }, { "contents": "Vardar Corps\n\n\nThe Vardar Corps was a corps of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland (JVuO) that operated on the left bank of the river Vardar during the World War II in Yugoslavia on the territory of modern-day North Macedonia and southern Serbia. Its commander was former Captain of the Royal Guard of the Royal Yugoslav Army Stojan Krstić. It consisted of four brigades with total number of 1,000 soldiers. Together with Jablanica Corps, South Morava Corps and Flying Corps it belonged under \"Mountain Staff 110\" () located in Sijarinska Banja", "id": "11325997" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nthe villages of Mitrovo Polje, Bzenica, Pleš, Jablanica, Grčak, Toskići, Budilovina and Milentija. When the Rasina reaches the small town of Brus, it enters the upper Rasina region and continues next to the villages of Tršanovci, Lepenac and Razbojna. At this point the river reaches the western side of the Veliki Jastrebac mountain, and makes a wide, elbow turn to the north. In this part of the course, the Rasina also makes a southeast border of the Aleksandrovačka Župa region. After the villages of Bogiše", "id": "209717" }, { "contents": "Doljanka\n\n\nDoljanka is a right tributary of Neretva river in North Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The length of Doljanka is around 18 km and reaches an altitude drop of about 400 m. Arises from sources scattered type under the far northeast slopes of Vran mountain on altitude of 1324 m. It runs through limestone canyon, which is high up to 1,200 m and flows through the village of Doljani. Doljanka flows into the Neretva River between Jablanica and Mostar, at an altitude of 300 m. It is also the connection over which trouts from the Neretva", "id": "8874715" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nValley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Albanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje", "id": "17667163" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n. The Neretva then flows northwest, through Konjic. It enters the Jablanica Reservoir (\"Jablaničko jezero\"), one of the largest in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake ends near the town of Jablanica. From here on, the Neretva turns southward, continuing to the Adriatic Sea. With the mountains lining its shores gradually receding, the Neretva enters a valley where the city of Mostar lies. It flows under the old bridge (\"Stari most\") and continues, now wider, toward the town of Čapljina and", "id": "3021139" }, { "contents": "Radan (mountain)\n\n\nRadan (Serbian Cyrillic: Радан) is a mountain in southern Serbia, near the town of Kuršumlija. Its highest peak, Šopot, has an elevation of 1,408 meters above sea level. Radan separates the valleys of the Toplica and Jablanica rivers. It is well covered with deciduous and evergreen forests. The best known spot on Radan is the Devil's Town – a peculiar rock formation consisting of hundreds of mushroom-like posts, located on its southern slopes. Near the Devil's Town there are ruins of Ivanova kula –", "id": "3957176" }, { "contents": "Crni Timok\n\n\nкотлина, \"depression of Crna Reka\"), populated with many smaller villages (Lukovo, Jablanica, Valakonje, Savinac, Gamzigrad, Zvezdan). At Gamzigrad there is also an important archeological site from Roman times. After a flow of 84 km, the Crni Timok reaches Zaječar, where it joins the Beli Timok River, forming the Veliki Timok River. It drains an area of . Early in its course it receives from the right the Radovanska, Suva, Velika, Salešča, Šarbanovačka, Jasenova, Bajnska and Suva", "id": "11459489" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (mountain range)\n\n\nJablanica ( ; ) is a mountain range in Southern and Southeastern Europe, stretching north-south direction across the border of Albania and the Republic of North Macedonia. The long mountain ridge is higher than for approximately , while the highest part, located in its very center, is Black Stone at high. Both countries have 50% of the mountain, Albania the west and North Macedonia the east. Jablanica Mountain contains many large mountain lakes. Shebenik mountain is located just to the west of Jablanica and give name to the Shebenik", "id": "3232652" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nThe Vlasina (Serbian Cyrillic: Власина), is a river in southeastern Serbia, a 70 km-long outflow of the Vlasina Lake and a right tributary to the Južna Morava, which also gives its name to the surrounding Vlasina region. The Vlasina flows out from the Vlasina Lake at an altitude of 1,213 m. Lake used to be a large, muddy peat bog, but in 1947-51 the Vlasina was dammed by the long, earth dam and the bog was turned into an artificial lake. The river flows to", "id": "14981330" }, { "contents": "Desná (Morava)\n\n\nDesná () is a river situated in Olomouc region of Czech republic, left tributary of the Morava. It is 43.4 km long, and its basin area is 338 km. The Desná river originates at the confluence of Hučivá Desná and Divoká Desná in Kouty nad Desnou, the village situated in deep valley of High Ash Mountains. The Desná then goes southwest through a valley toward the town of Šumperk. After approximately 43.4 km, the Desná flows into the Morava river near Postřelmov village.The mean annual discharge at its mouth", "id": "20977814" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nSerbian forces then headed south into the Morava valley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Muslims fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Turks fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Muslims departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessalonika. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in", "id": "1099566" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n, in the center of the region. Other larger towns include Trebinje, Stolac, Široki Brijeg, Posušje, Ljubuški, Grude, Konjic, and Čapljina. Borders between Herzegovina and Bosnia are unclear and often disputed. The upper flow of the Neretva River lies in northern Herzegovina, a heavily forested area with fast-flowing rivers and high mountains. Konjic and Jablanica lie in this area. The Neretva rises on Lebršnik Mountain, close to the Montenegro border, and as the river flows west, it enters Herzegovina. The entire", "id": "3021137" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nUpper Neretva, of the Neretva river from its source at 1,227 m.a.s.l. and headwaters gorge all the way to the town of Konjic is 90 km, flows from south to north - north-west as most of the Bosnia and Herzegovina rivers belonging to the Danube watershed, and cover some 1,390 km with average elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva briefly expanding into a wide valley which provides fertile agricultural land. There exists a large Jablaničko Lake, artificially formed after construction of dam near Jablanica. \"Second", "id": "16797216" }, { "contents": "Kubršnica\n\n\nThe Kubršnica (Serbian Cyrillic: Кубршница) is a river in Šumadija region of central Serbia, a 42 km-long left and the longest tributary to the Jasenica river. The Kubršnica originates from the Venčac mountain, in the Jasenica sub-region of Šumadija, in the wider area of the town of Aranđelovac. The terrain in the source area of the river is rich in marble and fireclay. The river flows to the east, next to the Aranđelovac's suburb of Banja and turns north near Topola. After the villages", "id": "5629731" }, { "contents": "Peć Bistrica\n\n\nkm-long, Rugovo glacier. The gorge is sparsely inhabited (the village of Mali Štupelj). As it comes out of the gorge, the Peć Bistrica reaches the town of Peć and enters the bottom of the Metohija depression through which it flows for the rest of its course. It runs parallel to the flows of the White Drin to the north and the Dečanska Bistrica to the south, next to the villages of Goraždevac, Lješane, Jablanica, Drenovce and Zaimovo, before it empties into the White Drin south of", "id": "15886949" }, { "contents": "Zlatibor\n\n\nsylvestris\" var. \"zlatiborica\" is a subspecies of pine originating from the mountain, and is endangered today. A hill by the name of Cigla\",\" located near the nearby village of Jablanica, still has some borderline markings of the Kingdom of Serbia, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Zlatibor itself is located in the northern part of the Stari Vlah region, a historical border region between Raška, Herzegovina and Bosnia. It spreads over an area of , in length, southeast to northwest, and up", "id": "3906304" }, { "contents": "Serbian Christmas traditions\n\n\nhousehold. The members of the group were called \"koledari\". The \"koleda\" was carried out from the Feast of Saint Ignatius Theophorus (five days before Christmas) up until the Epiphany. This custom was best preserved in the upper Pčinja District, and in the region around the River South Morava in the Jablanica District, southeastern Serbia. Regarded as pagan and discouraged by the Serbian Orthodox Church, the \"koleda\" ceased to be performed among most of the Serbs during the 19th and 20th centuries. \"Koledari\"", "id": "20573743" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwere designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of Medveđa have small numbers of Albanians and their descendants remained. This was due to a local Ottoman Albanian commander Shahid Pasha from the Jablanica area negotiating on good terms with Prince Milan and thereby guaranteeing their presence. Some other Albanians such as merchants attempted to remain in Niš, but they left after murders occurred and their property was sold off at low values. In 1879, some Albanian refugees from", "id": "1099570" }, { "contents": "Kosovo Pomoravlje\n\n\nThe region's largest cities are Gjilan and Bujanovac. The region is known as \"Kosovsko Pomoravlje\" (Косовско Поморавље, \"Morava Valley of Kosovo\") in Serbian and as Lugina e Anamoraves Binçes (\"Valley of Binač Morava\") in Albanian. Its name is derived from the Binač Morava River, which flows through northern Macedonia, eastern Kosovo and southern Serbia as part of the Great Morava river system. The region includes part of the valley and the Karadak and Koznik mountains. Gjilan has six municipalities and 287 smaller", "id": "13339352" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nAlbanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje, with the intention of then turning west and", "id": "17667142" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\nThe Resavčina (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресавчина) is a river in Serbia, a 32 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. It is sometimes also called \"Resavica\" or \"Resava\" (not to be confused with another Velika Morava's right tributary of Resava or its own tributary of Resavica). The Resavčina originates near the village of Proštinac in Svilajnac municipality. The river originally flows to the north, but soon turns west at the village of Dubnica and enters the western half of the Veliko Pomoravlje region", "id": "4886222" }, { "contents": "Ibar (river)\n\n\nThe Ibar, also known as the Ibër and Ibri (, , ), is a river that flows through eastern Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, with a total length of . The river begins in the Hajla mountain, in Rožaje, eastern Montenegro, and passes through Kosovo to flow into the West Morava river near Kraljevo, central Serbia. It belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area is , with an average discharge of 60 m³/s at the mouth. It is not navigable. The Ibar originates from", "id": "4536148" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Ilirska Bistrica\n\n\nJablanica (; ) is a settlement southeast of Ilirska Bistrica in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. Jablanica is the site of three known mass graves or unmarked graves from the end of the Second World War. They all contain the remains of German soldiers from the 97th Corps that were killed at the beginning of May 1945. The Mountain Fields Mass Grave (), also known as the Mountain Mass Grave (), lies in a meadow about 1.6 km northeast of Jablanica and contains the remains of 10 soldiers. The Solne Mass", "id": "16911511" }, { "contents": "Čezsoča\n\n\nČezsoča (; ) is a settlement in the Municipality of Bovec in the Littoral region of Slovenia. It includes the hamlets of Gorenja Vas (), Dolenja Vas (), Jablanica, Kršovec, and Na Glavi. Čezsoča lies in the valley on the left bank of the Soča River. The terrain then rises up towards Mount Polovnik (1,480 m). East of the settlement is Humčič Hill (810 m), behind which rises Mount Javoršček (1,557 m). Oplenk Creek flows through the village between Gorenja Vas and", "id": "14920585" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nJablanica, the Neretva enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching in depth. Three hydroelectric dams operate between Jablanica and Mostar. When the Neretva expands for the second and final time, it reaches its third section. This area is often colloquially called the \"\"Bosnian and Herzegovinian California\"\". The last of its course forms wide alluvial delta, before the river empties into the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Tatinac (also known as the", "id": "12890344" }, { "contents": "Jablaničko lake\n\n\nJablaničko lake () is a large artificially formed lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva briefly expands into a wide valley. River provided lot of fertile, agricultural land there, before lake flooded most of it. The lake was created in 1953 after construction of Jablanica Dam near Jablanica in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake has an irregular elongated shape. Its width varies along its length. The lake is a popular vacation destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Swimming, boating and especially fishing are popular activities", "id": "13828307" }, { "contents": "Jablanica Dam\n\n\nThe Jablanica Dam is an arch-gravity dam on the Neretva River about northeast of Jablanica in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The dam was constructed between 1947 and 1955 with the primary purpose of hydroelectric power production. The power station was commissioned in two stages, from 1955 until 1958. The first generator was commissioned in February 1955. An upgrade in 2008 increased the installed capacity of the power station from 150 MW to 180 MW. The dam's power station is located about to the southeast near Jablanica", "id": "854706" }, { "contents": "Jablanik\n\n\nJablanik (Serbian Cyrillic: Јабланик) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Valjevo. Its highest peak \"Jablanik\" has an elevation of 1,275 meters(10001020_ above sea level. Jablanik is located at the source of the river Jablanica. It is separated from nearby Medvednik mountain by high pass Stolica, while the Debelo Brdo saddle separates it from Povlen in the southeast. The highest peak has the same name as the mountain itself - Jablanik, and is 1,275 m high. The hills around the peak are mainly", "id": "366162" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\nThe Nišava or Nishava (Bulgarian and , ) is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia, a right tributary, and with a length of 218 km also the longest one, of the South Morava. The Nišava originates in western Bulgaria, in the Stara Planina mountains (east of Kom Peak) near the village of Gintsi. Its source is close to the Serbian border. It enters Serbia after 67 km of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries. Because it flows through Gintsi, the upper course of the river is", "id": "9627075" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nAfter Mramorac village, the Jasenica spills over in several parallel flows, which continue until its confluence. After the Pridvorica and Vodice villages (on different arms of the river), the Jasenica reaches the town of Smederevska Palanka, the most populous settlement in its valley. This is also where the Kubršnica, its main tributary, flows into it from the left. The Jasenica then gently bends to the east, flowing into the Great Morava near the village of Veliko Orašje (the southern arm of the river flows through the town", "id": "3481502" }, { "contents": "Gruža (river)\n\n\nThe Gruža (Serbian Cyrillic: Гружа, ) is a river in central Serbia. The river is a 62 km long left tributary to the Zapadna Morava. The Gruža originates in the central part of the Rudnik mountain, right under the mountain's main settlement, the village of Rudnik, northeast of the town of Gornji Milanovac, central Serbia. The river flows south next to the village of Majdan, around the Rudnik mountain into the Takovo region and at the village of Nevade, just few kilometers away from Gornji Milanovac,", "id": "10971320" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\n(hamlet Panjak) on the Serbian-Bosnian border Crni Rzav meets the Jablanica river at the village Gornje Vardište and finally the river Beli Rzav at the village of Donje Vardište. The Rzav continues as the natural extension of the Beli Rzav, but since the Black Rzav is longer, the latter is considered to be the main headstream. It floes between the southernmost part of the Zvijezda mountain (\"Ponos\" peak) from the north and the Suha Gora mountain from the south, next to the villages of Prosjek (and", "id": "11540155" }, { "contents": "Ub (river)\n\n\nThe Ub (Serbian Cyrillic: Уб) is a river in western Serbia, a 57 km-long right and longest tributary to Tamnava river. The Ub originates from the Vlašić mountain in Podgorina region of west Serbia, near the village of Kasapo. From its source to the mouth, the river flows to the east, parallel to the river Tamnava, which it will eventually join. The villages located in the upper section of the river's flow are Družetić, Pambukovica and Čučuge, where the Ub slightly turns to the", "id": "2261401" }, { "contents": "Olomouc Region\n\n\nof the region is situated on the water level of the Morava River near to Kojetín in the Přerov District (190 m above sea level). The Morava river flows through the region and the majority of the region's territory belongs to Morava’s drainage basin. A small northern part of the region belongs to the drainage basin of Odra River, which flows to the Baltic Sea. The Olomouc Region offers a great variety of natural points of interest. Protected landscape area of the Jeseníky mountains offers a number of scenic places such", "id": "11419394" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina\n\n\nJablanica is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is situated on the Neretva river and Jablanica lake. The municipality of Jablanica is a major tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The municipality offer a wide variety of activities. The surrounding mountains such as Plasa, Čvrsnica and Prenj offer both hunting grounds and a variety of hiking trails. One popular hiking destination is \"Hajdučka Vrata\", a natural wonder, the product of wind", "id": "9009264" }, { "contents": "Krupá (Morava)\n\n\nKrupá (German: Graupa Bach) is a creek in Šumperk District, Moravia, left tributary of the Morava. Its length is 19,2 km and its drainage basin covers 112.7 km2. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 4.48 m³/s. The Krupá originates in Czech part of the Śnieżnik Mountains, 400 meters above sea level. The Krupá then goes south toward the town of Staré Město. It flows into the Morava river near Hanušovice town. River keeps its natural character with meanders and original riversides. A river bottom is", "id": "1745557" }, { "contents": "Oskava (river)\n\n\nOskava is a river in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic, left tributary of the Morava river. Its length is 50.3 km and its drainage basin covers 569 km. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 3.53 m/s. The Oskava originates from southeast slope of Kamenná hora in Hrubý Jeseník, 215 meters above sea level. The river is surrounded by woods in upper reaches, flows through hills of Nízký Jeseník in middle reaches and its lower reaches is situated in swampy floodplain of Litovelské Pomoraví Protected Landscape Area.", "id": "8538845" }, { "contents": "Crna Trava\n\n\nCrna Trava ( ) is a village and municipality located in the Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to 2011 census, the population of the village is 434 inhabitants, while population of the municipality is 1,663. This is the smallest by population and poorest municipality in Serbia. Crna Trava is famous for its migrant builders, who are considered the best in the region and are colloquially described as \"building half of Yugoslavia\". The name of the village in Serbian translates to \"Black Grass\". The origin of the name", "id": "18032485" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\n. At the village of Kušiljevo, the river receives the small stream of \"Beljeva\" from the left and turns northward, which is the general direction of its course for the rest of the flow. The river flows parallel to the Velika Morava river as its satellite flow, in the Morava's floodplain, so there are no settlements on the Resavica itself, but several large villages are located in its valley (Porodin, Žabari, Simićevo, Aleksandrovac Požarevački, Vlaški Do, Poljana), all of them located on the", "id": "4886223" }, { "contents": "Lugomir\n\n\nThe Lugomir (Serbian Cyrillic: Лугомир) is a river in central Serbia, a 57 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. The Lugomir originates from two headstreams, the Dulenska reka and the Županjevačka reka. The shorter headstream of Županjevačka reka (Cyrillic: \"Жупањевачка река\") originates from the mountain of Gledićke planine in southern Šumadija region of central Serbia. Its spring is just some 500 m away from the source of Lugomir's another headstream, the Dulenska reka. The river first flows to the east", "id": "5130918" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\ncities in Serbia, 10 km after which the Nišava empties into the Južna Morava. However, with the rapid growth of Niš in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs, the banks of the Nišava are urbanized almost to its mouth. After being divided into districts in 1992, the Nišava District (with Niš as administrative center) is named after the river. The river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area covers 4,086 km, of which about 73% in Serbia, the rest in Bulgaria", "id": "9627077" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nsection\" begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama river between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes a southern course and enter a largest canyons of its course, running through steep slopes of magnificent mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching 800–1200 meters in depth. From here Neretva flows toward the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Jezernica (also Tatinac), the Gornji and Donji Krupac, the Ljuta-Dindolka, the Jesenica, the Bjelimićka Rijeka, the Slatinica, the Račica, the Rakitnica, the Konjička", "id": "16797217" }, { "contents": "Resava (river)\n\n\nThe Resava (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресава) is a river in central Serbia, a 65 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava. It also gives the name to the surrounding Resava region, the Resava Monastery, the coal mines in its valley and a popular tourist destination of Resava Cave. The Resava originates from the Homolje region in eastern Serbia. It springs out at an altitude of 1,100 m and flows westward between the mountains of Beljanica (on the north) and Kučaj (on the south). In its", "id": "15040274" }, { "contents": "A1 motorway (Serbia)\n\n\nJužna Morava river. Southern section (Niš–Leskovac–Vranje–Macedonian border) consists of 128 km that are in service, while additional 26 km are under construction. Construction of southern section has been completed by May 2019, and last sections opened for traffic on 18 May 2019: Highway passes through valley of South Morava, passes west of Niš, by Merošina and Leskovac, and after Grdelica built highway ends. 26 kilometers of highway under construction passes through Grdelica gorge, very difficult terrain. This sections is often considered", "id": "1785427" }, { "contents": "Čivelj\n\n\nČivelj is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in the municipality of Jablanica, Herzegovina-Neretva Canton, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1991, the village had six inhabitants, all of whom were Muslims. In 2013, Čivelj had 10 inhabitants. Tourism is solid. Civelj is placed 8 kilometres from Jablanica and it is placed on Jablanica lake. In lake there are 5 types of fishes including the most popular \"pastrmka\". The village was found in 1911. by local fishermen. Near Civelj", "id": "4645021" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nAlthough these streams are of low outflow, there are also numerous wellsprings rising on both sides of the canyon at the river banks, with high-capacity discharge. Three large hydroelectric power stations operate in this section of the Neretva, between Jablanica and Mostar, namely Grabovica HPP, Salakovac HPP and Mostar HPP. Jablanica lake is a large artificial lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva expands into a wide valley. The river provided fertile, agricultural land before the lake flooded most of it. The lake", "id": "12890353" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nThe Jasenica (Serbian Cyrillic: Јасеница, ) is a river in central Serbia. It is long and is the left tributary of the Great Morava. This river gives the name to the surrounding region. The Jasenica originates from several streams, most notably the Đurinci (Cyrillic: Ђуринци) from Venčac mountain, and the Srebrenica (Cyrillic: Сребреница) from the northern slopes of the Rudnik mountain in central Serbia. At its origin, the river runs through the eastern border of the Kačer region. It flows to the southeast", "id": "3481500" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nin north Skopje, Macedonia. The streams Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is, after passing the Macedonian-Serbian border, known as the Binačka Morava. After 49 km it meets the Preševska Moravica at Bujanovac, and for the remainder, 246 km, flows as the South Morava. The South Morava belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and its own drainage area is 15,696 km², of which 1,237 km² is in Bulgaria (through its right tributary Nišava). Its average", "id": "15699472" }, { "contents": "Pešter\n\n\nRivers Uvac, Vapa, Jablanica and Grabovica flow through the plateau. In the geologic past, the field was a large lake, of which only a small Sjenica lake near the village of Tuzinje remained. The soil is mostly karst interspersed with pastures. Economy of the area relies primarily on cattle breeding, chiefly sheep. Pešter is famous for its dairy products, especially the \"Sjenica cheese\" (\"Sjenički sir\"), as well as lamb and prosciutto. The plateau is sparsely populated: most settlements are on the", "id": "16748290" }, { "contents": "Sredačka župa\n\n\nSredačka Župa (; \"county of Sredska\") is a remote geographical region, a valley, in southeastern Kosovo, below the Šar Mountains at the source of the Prizrenska Bistrica. The region, an oval basin, lies below the Šar Mountains, at the source, upper stream of the Prizrenska Bistrica (\"Prizren river\"). South of the region between the Prizren mountains and Koritnik mountain, lies the Gora region. It currently includes Sredska, Pousko, Jablanica, Lokvica, Rečane, Živinjane, Planjane, Nebregošte,", "id": "13372292" }, { "contents": "Binačka Morava\n\n\nBinačka Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Биначка Морава; ) or (\"Mirusha\") is a river which flows in southeastern Kosovo and North Macedonia. It flows generally in the southwest to northeast direction, from Macedonian border to Bujanovac, where, after 49 km, meets Preševska Moravica, to create South Morava. The river begins in the mountain of Skopska Crna Gora, in North Macedonia, north of its capital Skopje. Streams of Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is,", "id": "12867615" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwar, the Albanian population depending on the area reacted differently to incoming Serbian forces by either offering resistance or fleeing toward nearby mountains and Ottoman Kosovo. Although most of these Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces, a small presence was allowed to remain in the Jablanica valley where their descendants live today. Serbs from Lab moved to Serbia during and after the first round of hostilities in 1876, while incoming Albanian refugees thereafter 1878 repopulated their villages. Albanian refugees also settled alongside the north-eastern Ottoman-Serbian border, in urban areas", "id": "1099553" }, { "contents": "Banjska River\n\n\nThe Banjska River ( / \"Banjska reka\", \"Baths River\"), is a river in southern Serbia, the right tributary of Toplica in which it flows near Kuršumlija. It rises under the far south-eastern branch of Kopaonik. It is 22 km long, with a river basin area of 155 km². The average flow at the mouth is 0,7 m³/s. The valley of the river is mostly ravines, while the basin is rich in forest. The Kuršumlija-Kuršumlijska Banja-Prepolac Pass-Podujevo-", "id": "14979528" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nby a catastrophic flood. Then unregulated river Jablanica, swollen after a long rainy period, broke on June 6, spilled out of its banks and caused enormous material damage Lebane. Flood toll was paid and human victims (killed two people). After this tragic event, with financial help, Lebane begins to industrialize faster, and the process of industrialization has caused more versatile and faster development of the city. According to the 2011 census, the municipality has 22,000 inhabitants. The ethnic composition of the municipality: The following table", "id": "17523935" }, { "contents": "Čvrsnica\n\n\nČvrsnica () is a mountain in the Dinarides of Bosnia and Herzegovina, located in northern Herzegovina, most of the mountain is located in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton municipalities of Mostar and Jablanica while the smaller part of the mountain, around 10% is located in the municipality of Posušje. The highest peak (Pločno) is 2228 metres. Čvrsnica is surrounded by the river Neretva from the east (20 km), its tributaries Doljanka (18 km) from the north and Drežanka (19.8 km) from the south,", "id": "6129606" }, { "contents": "Myjava (river)\n\n\nThe Myjava River is a river in western Slovakia and for a small part in the Czech Republic and left tributary of the Morava River. It rises in the White Carpathians near the village of Nová Lhota in Moravia, but crosses the Czech-Slovak border shortly afterwards and flows in a southern direction until the town of Myjava, where it enters the Myjava Hills and turns west. Near Sobotište it flows into the Záhorie Lowland and turns south until the village of Jablonica, turning northwest and from Senica it flows west, passing through", "id": "2099838" }, { "contents": "West Morava\n\n\nSouth and Great Morava's meridian (south-to-north) flow, the West Morava runs in an opposed, latitudinal (west-to-east) direction, dividing the region of Šumadija of the central Serbia from the southern parts of the country. Due to the West Morava's direction, it flows between many mountains, regions and sub-regions: The West Morava river valley, Zapadno Pomoravlje, is economically the most developed of all three Morava river valleys. With the valley of the Ibar, the West", "id": "7786624" }, { "contents": "Ralja (river)\n\n\nThe Ralja () is a river in Šumadija region of Serbia, a 51 km long left tributary to the Jezava, a tributary of the Great Morava river. It also gives its name to the surrounding Šumadija's subregion of Ralja. The Ralja originates from the northern part of the Kosmaj mountain, north of the village of Velika Ivanča, in the Sopot municipality of the City of Belgrade. Almost from the source, the river valley is a route for the Belgrade-Niš railway. At the villages of Popović and Mali", "id": "2491229" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nBovan gorge carved by the river and is very popular local and regional tourist destination, especially among campers and fishermen, but the coastline is not put in order. The river continues to the south, in an inverse flow, and after the villages of Subotinac and Kraljevo, it empties into the Južna Morava at the town of Aleksinac. The lower section used to be a coal mining area too, just like the upper one, but the mines (Aleksinački Rudnik) are closed now. The Sokobanjska Moravica brlongs to the Black", "id": "1726358" }, { "contents": "Golijska Moravica\n\n\nThe Golijska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Голијска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in western Serbia. With a length of 98 km, it is the longer headstream of the Zapadna Morava (it forms it with the Đetinja), and thus, of the Velika Morava. Its name, Moravica, means \"little Morava\" in Serbian, and it also gives its name to the surrounding region and the modern Moravica District of Serbia. The Golijska Moravica originates from the western slopes of the Golija mountain and flows", "id": "5380325" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\n. The Nišava is not navigable. It is not only the longest tributary of the Južna Morava, but also the largest one in terms of discharge (36 km/s). It has many smaller tributaries, the most important being the Temštica from the right, and the Jerma (or Sukovska reka), Crvena reka, Koritnička reka and Kutinska reka from the left. The Nišava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia: the route follows the valleys of the Morava", "id": "9627078" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nThe Toplica (Serbian Cyrillic: Топлица, ) is a river in southern Serbia. The river is 130 km long and gives its name to the region it flows through, which constitutes most of the modern Toplica District of Serbia. The Toplica originates under the name of \"Duboka\" from the eastern slopes of the Kopaonik mountain, just south of the highest peak, Pančićev vrh. It flows to the southeast, on the western slopes of the Lepa Gora mountain, next to the villages of Merćez, Selova, Žuč,", "id": "19530451" }, { "contents": "Great Morava\n\n\nof the Velika Morava's right tributary Resava). The average discharge of the Velika Morava on its confluence with Danube is 255 m³/s (120 m³/s brought by Zapadna Morava, 100 m³/s by Južna Morava, and 35 m³/s amounted by the Velika Morava itself). Tributaries of the Velika Morava are short, the longest one being the Jasenica (79 km) and others rarely exceeding 50 km. Right tributaries are: Jovanovačka reka, Crnica, Ravanica, Resava and Resavica (or Resavčina). Left tributaries are more numerous,", "id": "2295702" }, { "contents": "Vevčani\n\n\nVevčani () is a village in the Republic of North Macedonia. It is the only settlement and seat of Vevčani Municipality. The village of Vevčani is found in the southwestern range at the foot of the Jablanica mountain range. It is situated from 800 – 950 metres above sea level. The village is located 14 km North-West of the town of Struga. The village is situated near the villages of Oktisi, Velešta, Podgorci, Gorna Belica with the Albanian border to the West of the village. The famous Vevčani", "id": "5042995" } ]
The Jablanica ( Serbian : Јабланица , ) is an river in southern Serbia . A left tributary of the South ( or Južna ) Morava river , it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia 's Jablanica District , with the region contributing about one third of the district 's area . The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain , near the village of Grbavce , on the administrative border of the Kosovo province . The area is rich in thermal springs , so several spas are located near the river : Stara Banja , Ravna Banja and Sijarina with popular Sijarinska Banja . At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary Čokotinska reka ( Cyrillic : Чокотинска река ) , turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point . The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the and Radan mountains , in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the in Kosovo . The river flows eastward , passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo , before reaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac , part of the depression of Leskovac , which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava . In the region , near Lebane , a famed archeological find of ( Iustiniana Prima ) is located . The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo , Vranovce , Bošnjace , Turekovac and Stopanje , reaches Vinarce , the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac , and turns north . First it flows parallel to the Veternica river , to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje , then parallel to the Južna Morava . After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava . From Pečenjevce , a parallel flow ( canal ) begins , connecting the Jablanica and s , some 15 km to the north . Through Južna Morava , the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea [START_ENT] drainage basin [END_ENT] , draining an area of 895 km ² itself . It 's not navigable and has an average discharge of 6 m ³ / s , which in rainy years grows much higher , so the river floods its valley causing lots of material damage . The name of the river , Jablanica , in Serbian means the
c94127fd-3e02-4923-9c30-d67d56ffdb9b_river:17
[{"answer": "Drainage basin", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "191162", "title": "Drainage basin"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nreaching the town of Lebane where the Jablanica enters the lower part of its valley and flows for the next 48 km in low Field of Leskovac, part of the depression of Leskovac, which itself is part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. In the region, near Lebane, a famed archeological find of Caričin grad (\"Iustiniana Prima\") is located. The Jablanica flows next to the villages of Ždeglovo, Vranovce, Bošnjace, Turekovac and Stopanje, reaches Vinarce, the northern suburb of the city of Leskovac", "id": "3481303" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\n, and turns north. First it flows parallel to the Veternica river, to which it is connected by canal at the village of Zalužje, then parallel to the Južna Morava. After the villages of Dupljane and Pečenjevce it turns east and flows into the Južna Morava. From Pečenjevce, a parallel flow (canal) begins, connecting the Jablanica and Toplica rivers, some 15 km to the north. Through Južna Morava, the Jablanica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, draining an area of itself. It's not navigable", "id": "3481304" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\npopular Sijarinska Banja. At the village of Maćedonce Retkocersko the Jablanica receives the left tributary \"Čokotinska reka\" (Cyrillic: \"Чокотинска река\"), turns southeast and the region of Jablanica begins from that point. The upper Jablanica region is made of narrow river valley on the southern slopes of the Majdan and Radan mountains, in the westernmost corner of Jablanica District and near the border of the District of Priština in Kosovo. The river flows eastward, passing regional center of Medveđa and the villages of Rujkovac and Šilovo, before", "id": "3481302" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (river)\n\n\nThe Jablanica (, ) is an river in southern Serbia. A left tributary of the South (or Južna) Morava river, it gives its name to the region of Jablanica and to modern Serbia's Jablanica District, with the region contributing about one third of the district's area. The Jablanica originates from the Goljak mountain, near the village of Grbavce, on the border with Kosovo. The area is rich in thermal springs, so several spas are located near the river: Stara Banja, Ravna Banja and Sijarina with", "id": "3481301" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nJablanica with third parallel flow, the \"Sušica\", being formed in between. Settlements include many small villages, like Vina, Bukova Gora, Miroševce, Žabljane, Beli Potok and Strojkovce. In the Leskovac field, the river gently turns north, receives the Sušica from the left and reaches the town of Leskovac. The Veternica continues northward, being connected to the Jablanica river by the canal at the village of Bogojevce, before it empties into the Južna Morava. The Veternica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its", "id": "11539775" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nThe Veternica (Serbian Cyrillic: Ветерница, ) is a river in southern Serbia, a 75 km long left tributary to the Južna Morava, which gives the name to the region surrounding its valley. The Veternica originates from the Grot peak, the southernmost part of the Kukavica mountain. Four smaller streams meet at the village of Vlase and continue to the north as the Veternica. The river flows next to the villages of Golemo Selo, Oštra Glava and Gagince, where it flows parallel to the Jablanica river. As the Veternica", "id": "11539773" }, { "contents": "Veternica\n\n\nbends to the northeast, it enters the low Veternica region, part of the Leskovac field in the composite valley of the Južna Morava. Small region, located between the Kukavica mountain on the south and the Jablanica region on the north, is divided in two micro-regions, upper one being centered on the small town of Vučje (which is not located on the river itself) while the center of the lower micro-region is the town of Leskovac. As it enters the region, the Veternica furthers away from the", "id": "11539774" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nthe west, Kukavica and Čemernik in the south and Babička Gora, Seličevica and Suva Planina to the east. The largest river in the region of Leskovac is the South Morava River, which flows south to north. Tributaries of the South Morava are: the Vlasina river, which collects water from Lake Vlasina and flows through Crna Trava and Vlasotince; the Veternica river, which flows through Leskovac; the Jablanica river, which springs from the foot of Goljak and flows through Medveđa and Lebane; the Pusta (Deserted) river,", "id": "2857704" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nof 590 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and is not navigable. The region of Pusta Reka mostly correspondence with the river's watershed. It is located between the Pasjača mountain and lower Toplica region (on the north), the Southern Pomoravlje (Field of Leskovac, on the east), the Jablanica region (on the south) and the Radan mountain (on the west). The region is an agricultural area, almost without any industry, except for some smaller facilities in regional center, Bojnik", "id": "12523581" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nof Podina, Voljčince, Badnjevac and the smaller regional center Žitorađa. After the Toplica reaches municipal center of Doljevac, it enters the most densely populated part of the south Pomoravlje, turns north and flows into the Južna Morava at the village of Orljane, across the medieval ruins of Kurvin grad, as Južna Morava's longest left tributary. The Toplica belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin with its own drainage area of 2,217 km². The river is not navigable. The river valley is a major traffic route in southern Serbia as", "id": "19530454" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nThe Sokobanjska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Сокобањска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in central eastern Serbia, a 58 km-long right tributary to the Južna Morava river. The Sokobanjska Moravica originates from the eastern slopes of the Devica mountain, near the village of Skrobnica. The river flows to the north, turns westward at the village of Levovik and enters the Banja region. The rivers flows between the northern slopes of the Devica and Ozren mountains (on the south) and southern slopes of the Rtanj mountain", "id": "1726356" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\nmouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. As the wider Jabllanica region, Medveđa also had an Albanian majority. These Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces in a way that today would be characterized as ethnic cleansing. Due to depopulation and economic considerations some small numbers of Albanians were allowed to stay and return though not to their previous settlements and instead were designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of", "id": "7117787" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\n, a notable Muslim population existed in the districts of Niš, Pirot, Vranje, Leskovac, Prokuplje and Kuršumlija. The rural parts of Toplica, Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the", "id": "1099558" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nthe southernmost slopes of the Suva Planina and Babička Gora mountains, it reaches the town of Vlasotince and western parts of the low Leskovac field, part of the composite valley of the Južna Morava. After the villages of Batulovce and Stajkovce, the Vlasina empties into the Južna Morava, east of the Leskovac's eastern suburb of Mrštane. The Vlasina drains an area of 991 km², belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin and it is not navigable. On 26 June 1988, after a period of heavy rains, Vlasina was a", "id": "14981332" }, { "contents": "Pusta River (South Morava)\n\n\nThe Pusta River ( / \"Pusta reka\", \"Desolate River\") is a river in southern Serbia, a 71-km long left tributary to the South Morava. It also gives the name to the Pusta Reka region in its valley. The river originates northeast of Prolom Banja, near the Sokolovica village, on the northern tip of the Radan mountain, as the \"Golema River\" (\"Big River\"). It flows eastward, between the mountains of Radan (to the south) and Pasjača (to the", "id": "12523579" }, { "contents": "Persecution of Muslims during Ottoman contraction\n\n\nReka and Jablanica valleys and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river mouths and mountain slopes and both peoples inhabited other regions of the South Morava river basin. The Muslim population of most of the area was composed out of ethnic Gheg Albanians and with Turks located in urban centres. Part of the Turks were of Albanian origin. The Muslims in the cities of Niš and Pirot were Turkish-speaking; Vranje and Leskovac were Turkish- and Albanian-speaking; Prokuplje", "id": "8891598" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nvalley between Konjic and Jablanica, known simply as \"Neretva\" since Middle Ages, the new point for hydrographical division became dam of the Jablanica HPP where also is a place of confluence of the rivers Neretva and Rama. Here the Neretva river suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before it reach town of Jablanica. From this point it turns again toward south and enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes of the mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica", "id": "12890350" }, { "contents": "Rama (Neretva)\n\n\nRama is a river in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a major tributary of the Neretva. It joins it from the right by discharging into Neretva's artificial reservoir, Jablaničko lake, at place called Marina Pećina, near village of Gračac, between location of underground powerhouse of Rama Hydroelectric Power Station and Jablanica Dam, depending on water level in Jablaničko lake, some 15 kilometers upstream from Jablanica. The Rama flows through municipalities of Prozor-Rama and Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, while its headwaters together with wellsprings in the region of", "id": "3052779" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\nThe Kolubara (Serbian Cyrillic: Колубара, ), is a long river in western Serbia; it is an eastern, right tributary to the Sava river. Kolubara is formed by the two small rivers Obnica and Jablanica. \"Obnica\" is the river in Western Serbia that springs at the foot of the mountain Medvednik. It flows to the East, through the villages of Suvodanje, Bobova, Majinović, Pričević and Zlatarić, and at the city of Valjevo meets the river \"Jablanica\" and forms Kolubara. The Obnica is", "id": "20109582" }, { "contents": "Medveđa\n\n\ndating to the 4th century AD lay at various locations of the town, as it was a transitory zone of Upper Moesia; travel and postal stations are among the finds. Toponyms such as \"Arbanaška\" and \"Đjake\" shows an Albanian presence in the Toplica and Southern Morava regions (located north-east of contemporary Kosovo) before the expulsion of Albanians during 1877–1878 period. The rural parts of Jablanica valley and adjoining semi-mountainous interior was inhabited by compact Muslim Albanian population while Serbs in those areas lived near the river", "id": "7117786" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\naverage elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva again expands into a third and largest valley which provided fertile agricultural land before it was flooded by large artificial reservoir, Jablaničko Lake, formed after construction of a Jablanica Dam near town of Jablanica. The second section begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes almost 180° degrees turn toward east-southeast and flows the short leg before reaches town of Jablanica, from which point turns again toward south. From", "id": "12890343" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nLebane () is a town and municipality located in Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 10,062 inhabitants, while the municipality has 20,000 inhabitants. The town is located at the confluence of the rivers Jablanica and Šumanska Reka, in the alluvial plain created by the former. Just northeast of the town a larger plain called Leskovačko polje extends toward the town of Leskovac, which is the district seat. The elevation of the town of Lebane is between 275.2 and 420 MASL.", "id": "17523929" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nRakic writes about it as a \"\"big village populated by Serbs, in a valley, on the river Jablanica, on its left bank.\"\" Only when Lebane got the role of Jablanica district headquarters, it began to gradually develop in a direction of a small town. The core of this small town was a series of houses along the Jablanica which is 45m wide here (as is even now); at the end of this series are the buildings of the Court and Municipality. The main feature of", "id": "17523931" }, { "contents": "Štulac (Lebane)\n\n\nthe village of Prekopčelica. The village is located on the valley slopes of the Caričin Potok creek. It is scattered between the altitudes of . It is situated in the wider Pusta Reka region. The village rests on the western slopes of the , which here divides the regions of Pusta Reka and Jablanica. On the west, the easternmost slopes of the Radan mountain begin. The village area covers . The Slavs settled in the area in the 7th century, centering around the ruins of Iustiniana Prima. Due to the lack of", "id": "11151840" }, { "contents": "Grdelica\n\n\nGrdelica () is a town in southern Serbia. It is situated in the Leskovac municipality, in the Jablanica District. The total population of the town was 3,194 people as of the 2011 census. For census purposes, Grdelica is divided into two adjacent parts, southern \"Grdelica town\" (\"Grdelica varoš\"; population 2,136) and northern \"Grdelica village\" (\"Grdelica selo\"; 1,058). Grdelica lies at the South Morava river, on the mountainous terrain at the entrance of the Grdelica Gorge. It", "id": "460756" }, { "contents": "Gornji Bučumet\n\n\nall settlements registered separately in the census. The three settlements lie in the South Morava basin, above the Jablanica river, and as such are located in the Upper Jablanica region. The highest mountain in Upper Bučumet is Paramid (853), with the mountain of Sv. Petar (1149) being located in Middle Bučumet. The three neighbourhoods of Bučumet are 470 to 853 metres above sea level. There is a medieval church built on the ruins of an older church. During the Toplica-Jablanica Operation (, ) in", "id": "12752738" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nthe huge floods of its daughter river. The South Morava has 157 tributaries. The most important left tributaries are: Jablanica, Veternica, Pusta reka and Toplica. Right tributaries are: Vrla, Vlasina, Nišava (the longest) and Sokobanjska Moravica. The South Morava has a significant potential for electricity production, and a huge hydroelectrical system (Vlasina- Vrla I-IV power stations) has been constructed in its drainage basin. To a certain extent, its waters are used for irrigation. The river valley's most important role", "id": "15699476" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nThe Rasina () is a river in south central Serbia. The long river flows through the Rasina region, gives its name to the modern Rasina District of Serbia, and flows into the Zapadna Morava near the city of Kruševac. Its historical name is Arsen (Αρσεγα). The Rasina springs from the southern slopes of the Goč mountain, near the village of Rašovka, southwest of the most famous Serbian spa, Vrnjačka Banja. The river originally flows to the southeast, around the mountains of Željin and Kopaonik, next to", "id": "209716" }, { "contents": "Leskovac\n\n\nLeskovac (Serbian Cyrillic: Лесковац, ) is a city and the administrative center of the Jablanica District in southern Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the city urban area has 60,288 inhabitants, while the city administrative area has 144,206. Traces of life of the Brnjica culture (8th century BC) is seen at the Hisar Hill (Hisar Leskovac) that was protected by a deep moat with a palisade on its inner side, a fortification similar to that of another fortification on the site near Zlokućane in the Velika Morava basin", "id": "2857693" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nThe favorable location and the richness of nature made Jablanica valley important place since the earliest times. Traffic affordable and fertile, Leskovac valley has provided favorable conditions for the settlement of population. Archaeological findings, of which the most important are Hissar and Caričin grad (Iustiniana Prima) show that life in this area, continuously evolved from prehistoric man to date. First mention of Lebane as Hlebane dates back to 1512. Lebane is formed as a village of the same name after the liberation in 1878. Visiting Serbia in 1880s, M.", "id": "17523930" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nThe South Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Јужна Морава, Serbian Latin: \"Južna Morava\", ; ) is a river in eastern Kosovo and in southern Serbia, which represents the shorter headwater of Great Morava. Today, it is 295 km long, including its source river Binačka Morava. It flows generally in the south to north direction, from Macedonian border to Kosovo and onwards to Central Serbia, where it meets West Morava at Stalać, to create Great Morava. The river rises in the Skopska Crna Gora mountain", "id": "15699471" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\nis the Rzav's longer headstream. It originates from the Čigota mountain, eastern section of the Zlatibor mountain. The river originally flows northward, next to the villages of Vodice and Jokina Ćuprija, reaches the central section of the Zlatibor where it is dammed and creates the artificial Ribnica lake (surface area of 10 km²), after the nearby village of Ribnica. After the lake, the river sharply turns west and soon gets followed by the parallel stream of the \"Jablanica\" river. After crossing the village of Mokra Gora", "id": "11540154" }, { "contents": "Kolubara\n\n\n25 km long. Jablanica originates on the eastern slopes of the Jablanik mountain, just few kilometers away from Obnica. It curves around Parač mountain and next to the village of Balinović, before it meets Obnica in Valjevo. Jablanica is 21.5 km long. This is also the beginning of the long region of the Kolubara valley, divided in two large parts, referred to as Upper (\"gornja\") Kolubara and Lower (\"donja\") Kolubara (around the Belgrade's suburb of Obrenovac). At Valjevo, the", "id": "20109583" }, { "contents": "Jablanica District\n\n\nThe Jablanica District (, ) is one of nine administrative districts of Southern and Eastern Serbia. It expands in the south-eastern parts of Serbia. According to the 2011 census results, it has a population of 215,463 inhabitants. The administrative center of the district is the city of Leskovac. The district encompasses the municipalities of: According to the 2011 census results, the Jablanica Distract has a total population of 216,304 inhabitants. Ethnic composition of the Jablanica District: Famous cultural-historic monuments in this District are: the Roman", "id": "13223854" }, { "contents": "Kalna, Crna Trava\n\n\nKalna () is a small village in the Crna Trava municipality of the Jablanica District of Serbia. Kalna village is an old Serbian village, 35 km away from the Crna Trava. It is located between Tumba and Serbian-Bulgarian border, at an altitude of 500 to 1100 m. The total area is rural area of 7285 hectares. The Kalna can be reached from three directions: The road in this way was there since the Turkish rule. It was the shortest connection of Leskovac valley (Dubočica) to Sofia and Constantinople", "id": "11211518" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina-Neretva Canton\n\n\ntook place there during World War II and there is a large museum in Jablanica dedicated to these battles. The Neretva river runs through the cities of Konjic, Jablanica, Mostar and Čapljina before it flows through Croatia and into the Adriatic Sea. There are large lakes in the canton such as the Jablanica lake located around the city Jablanica. The southern most municipality in the canton is the Neum municipality which borders the Adriatic sea and the eastern most municipality is the Ravno municipality along the border with Croatia. Of the ten cantons comprising", "id": "3225485" }, { "contents": "Vardar Corps\n\n\nThe Vardar Corps was a corps of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland (JVuO) that operated on the left bank of the river Vardar during the World War II in Yugoslavia on the territory of modern-day North Macedonia and southern Serbia. Its commander was former Captain of the Royal Guard of the Royal Yugoslav Army Stojan Krstić. It consisted of four brigades with total number of 1,000 soldiers. Together with Jablanica Corps, South Morava Corps and Flying Corps it belonged under \"Mountain Staff 110\" () located in Sijarinska Banja", "id": "11325997" }, { "contents": "Rasina (river)\n\n\nthe villages of Mitrovo Polje, Bzenica, Pleš, Jablanica, Grčak, Toskići, Budilovina and Milentija. When the Rasina reaches the small town of Brus, it enters the upper Rasina region and continues next to the villages of Tršanovci, Lepenac and Razbojna. At this point the river reaches the western side of the Veliki Jastrebac mountain, and makes a wide, elbow turn to the north. In this part of the course, the Rasina also makes a southeast border of the Aleksandrovačka Župa region. After the villages of Bogiše", "id": "209717" }, { "contents": "Doljanka\n\n\nDoljanka is a right tributary of Neretva river in North Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The length of Doljanka is around 18 km and reaches an altitude drop of about 400 m. Arises from sources scattered type under the far northeast slopes of Vran mountain on altitude of 1324 m. It runs through limestone canyon, which is high up to 1,200 m and flows through the village of Doljani. Doljanka flows into the Neretva River between Jablanica and Mostar, at an altitude of 300 m. It is also the connection over which trouts from the Neretva", "id": "8874715" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nValley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Albanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje", "id": "17667163" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n. The Neretva then flows northwest, through Konjic. It enters the Jablanica Reservoir (\"Jablaničko jezero\"), one of the largest in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake ends near the town of Jablanica. From here on, the Neretva turns southward, continuing to the Adriatic Sea. With the mountains lining its shores gradually receding, the Neretva enters a valley where the city of Mostar lies. It flows under the old bridge (\"Stari most\") and continues, now wider, toward the town of Čapljina and", "id": "3021139" }, { "contents": "Radan (mountain)\n\n\nRadan (Serbian Cyrillic: Радан) is a mountain in southern Serbia, near the town of Kuršumlija. Its highest peak, Šopot, has an elevation of 1,408 meters above sea level. Radan separates the valleys of the Toplica and Jablanica rivers. It is well covered with deciduous and evergreen forests. The best known spot on Radan is the Devil's Town – a peculiar rock formation consisting of hundreds of mushroom-like posts, located on its southern slopes. Near the Devil's Town there are ruins of Ivanova kula –", "id": "3957176" }, { "contents": "Crni Timok\n\n\nкотлина, \"depression of Crna Reka\"), populated with many smaller villages (Lukovo, Jablanica, Valakonje, Savinac, Gamzigrad, Zvezdan). At Gamzigrad there is also an important archeological site from Roman times. After a flow of 84 km, the Crni Timok reaches Zaječar, where it joins the Beli Timok River, forming the Veliki Timok River. It drains an area of . Early in its course it receives from the right the Radovanska, Suva, Velika, Salešča, Šarbanovačka, Jasenova, Bajnska and Suva", "id": "11459489" }, { "contents": "Jablanica (mountain range)\n\n\nJablanica ( ; ) is a mountain range in Southern and Southeastern Europe, stretching north-south direction across the border of Albania and the Republic of North Macedonia. The long mountain ridge is higher than for approximately , while the highest part, located in its very center, is Black Stone at high. Both countries have 50% of the mountain, Albania the west and North Macedonia the east. Jablanica Mountain contains many large mountain lakes. Shebenik mountain is located just to the west of Jablanica and give name to the Shebenik", "id": "3232652" }, { "contents": "Vlasina (river)\n\n\nThe Vlasina (Serbian Cyrillic: Власина), is a river in southeastern Serbia, a 70 km-long outflow of the Vlasina Lake and a right tributary to the Južna Morava, which also gives its name to the surrounding Vlasina region. The Vlasina flows out from the Vlasina Lake at an altitude of 1,213 m. Lake used to be a large, muddy peat bog, but in 1947-51 the Vlasina was dammed by the long, earth dam and the bog was turned into an artificial lake. The river flows to", "id": "14981330" }, { "contents": "Desná (Morava)\n\n\nDesná () is a river situated in Olomouc region of Czech republic, left tributary of the Morava. It is 43.4 km long, and its basin area is 338 km. The Desná river originates at the confluence of Hučivá Desná and Divoká Desná in Kouty nad Desnou, the village situated in deep valley of High Ash Mountains. The Desná then goes southwest through a valley toward the town of Šumperk. After approximately 43.4 km, the Desná flows into the Morava river near Postřelmov village.The mean annual discharge at its mouth", "id": "20977814" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nSerbian forces then headed south into the Morava valley and toward Leskovac. The majority of urban Muslims fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Turks fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Muslims departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessalonika. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in", "id": "1099566" }, { "contents": "Herzegovina\n\n\n, in the center of the region. Other larger towns include Trebinje, Stolac, Široki Brijeg, Posušje, Ljubuški, Grude, Konjic, and Čapljina. Borders between Herzegovina and Bosnia are unclear and often disputed. The upper flow of the Neretva River lies in northern Herzegovina, a heavily forested area with fast-flowing rivers and high mountains. Konjic and Jablanica lie in this area. The Neretva rises on Lebršnik Mountain, close to the Montenegro border, and as the river flows west, it enters Herzegovina. The entire", "id": "3021137" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nUpper Neretva, of the Neretva river from its source at 1,227 m.a.s.l. and headwaters gorge all the way to the town of Konjic is 90 km, flows from south to north - north-west as most of the Bosnia and Herzegovina rivers belonging to the Danube watershed, and cover some 1,390 km with average elevation of 1.2%. Right below Konjic, the Neretva briefly expanding into a wide valley which provides fertile agricultural land. There exists a large Jablaničko Lake, artificially formed after construction of dam near Jablanica. \"Second", "id": "16797216" }, { "contents": "Kubršnica\n\n\nThe Kubršnica (Serbian Cyrillic: Кубршница) is a river in Šumadija region of central Serbia, a 42 km-long left and the longest tributary to the Jasenica river. The Kubršnica originates from the Venčac mountain, in the Jasenica sub-region of Šumadija, in the wider area of the town of Aranđelovac. The terrain in the source area of the river is rich in marble and fireclay. The river flows to the east, next to the Aranđelovac's suburb of Banja and turns north near Topola. After the villages", "id": "5629731" }, { "contents": "Peć Bistrica\n\n\nkm-long, Rugovo glacier. The gorge is sparsely inhabited (the village of Mali Štupelj). As it comes out of the gorge, the Peć Bistrica reaches the town of Peć and enters the bottom of the Metohija depression through which it flows for the rest of its course. It runs parallel to the flows of the White Drin to the north and the Dečanska Bistrica to the south, next to the villages of Goraždevac, Lješane, Jablanica, Drenovce and Zaimovo, before it empties into the White Drin south of", "id": "15886949" }, { "contents": "Zlatibor\n\n\nsylvestris\" var. \"zlatiborica\" is a subspecies of pine originating from the mountain, and is endangered today. A hill by the name of Cigla\",\" located near the nearby village of Jablanica, still has some borderline markings of the Kingdom of Serbia, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Zlatibor itself is located in the northern part of the Stari Vlah region, a historical border region between Raška, Herzegovina and Bosnia. It spreads over an area of , in length, southeast to northwest, and up", "id": "3906304" }, { "contents": "Serbian Christmas traditions\n\n\nhousehold. The members of the group were called \"koledari\". The \"koleda\" was carried out from the Feast of Saint Ignatius Theophorus (five days before Christmas) up until the Epiphany. This custom was best preserved in the upper Pčinja District, and in the region around the River South Morava in the Jablanica District, southeastern Serbia. Regarded as pagan and discouraged by the Serbian Orthodox Church, the \"koleda\" ceased to be performed among most of the Serbs during the 19th and 20th centuries. \"Koledari\"", "id": "20573743" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwere designated concentrated village clusters in the Toplica, Masurica and Jablanica areas. Of those only in the Jablanica valley centered around the town of Medveđa have small numbers of Albanians and their descendants remained. This was due to a local Ottoman Albanian commander Shahid Pasha from the Jablanica area negotiating on good terms with Prince Milan and thereby guaranteeing their presence. Some other Albanians such as merchants attempted to remain in Niš, but they left after murders occurred and their property was sold off at low values. In 1879, some Albanian refugees from", "id": "1099570" }, { "contents": "Kosovo Pomoravlje\n\n\nThe region's largest cities are Gjilan and Bujanovac. The region is known as \"Kosovsko Pomoravlje\" (Косовско Поморавље, \"Morava Valley of Kosovo\") in Serbian and as Lugina e Anamoraves Binçes (\"Valley of Binač Morava\") in Albanian. Its name is derived from the Binač Morava River, which flows through northern Macedonia, eastern Kosovo and southern Serbia as part of the Great Morava river system. The region includes part of the valley and the Karadak and Koznik mountains. Gjilan has six municipalities and 287 smaller", "id": "13339352" }, { "contents": "Albanians in Serbia\n\n\nAlbanians fled, taking most of their belongings before the Serbian army arrived. The Serbian army also took Pirot and the Albanians fled to Kosovo, Macedonia and some went toward Thrace. Ottoman forces surrendered Niš on 10 January 1878 and most Albanians departed for Pristina, Prizren, Skopje and Thessaloniki. The Albanian neighbourhood in Niš was burned. Serbian forces continued their southwest advance entering the valleys of Kosanica, Pusta Reka and Jablanica. Serbian forces in the Morava Valley continued to head for Vranje, with the intention of then turning west and", "id": "17667142" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\nThe Resavčina (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресавчина) is a river in Serbia, a 32 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. It is sometimes also called \"Resavica\" or \"Resava\" (not to be confused with another Velika Morava's right tributary of Resava or its own tributary of Resavica). The Resavčina originates near the village of Proštinac in Svilajnac municipality. The river originally flows to the north, but soon turns west at the village of Dubnica and enters the western half of the Veliko Pomoravlje region", "id": "4886222" }, { "contents": "Ibar (river)\n\n\nThe Ibar, also known as the Ibër and Ibri (, , ), is a river that flows through eastern Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, with a total length of . The river begins in the Hajla mountain, in Rožaje, eastern Montenegro, and passes through Kosovo to flow into the West Morava river near Kraljevo, central Serbia. It belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area is , with an average discharge of 60 m³/s at the mouth. It is not navigable. The Ibar originates from", "id": "4536148" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Ilirska Bistrica\n\n\nJablanica (; ) is a settlement southeast of Ilirska Bistrica in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. Jablanica is the site of three known mass graves or unmarked graves from the end of the Second World War. They all contain the remains of German soldiers from the 97th Corps that were killed at the beginning of May 1945. The Mountain Fields Mass Grave (), also known as the Mountain Mass Grave (), lies in a meadow about 1.6 km northeast of Jablanica and contains the remains of 10 soldiers. The Solne Mass", "id": "16911511" }, { "contents": "Čezsoča\n\n\nČezsoča (; ) is a settlement in the Municipality of Bovec in the Littoral region of Slovenia. It includes the hamlets of Gorenja Vas (), Dolenja Vas (), Jablanica, Kršovec, and Na Glavi. Čezsoča lies in the valley on the left bank of the Soča River. The terrain then rises up towards Mount Polovnik (1,480 m). East of the settlement is Humčič Hill (810 m), behind which rises Mount Javoršček (1,557 m). Oplenk Creek flows through the village between Gorenja Vas and", "id": "14920585" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nJablanica, the Neretva enters third and the largest canyon on its course, running through the steep slopes mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching in depth. Three hydroelectric dams operate between Jablanica and Mostar. When the Neretva expands for the second and final time, it reaches its third section. This area is often colloquially called the \"\"Bosnian and Herzegovinian California\"\". The last of its course forms wide alluvial delta, before the river empties into the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Tatinac (also known as the", "id": "12890344" }, { "contents": "Jablaničko lake\n\n\nJablaničko lake () is a large artificially formed lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva briefly expands into a wide valley. River provided lot of fertile, agricultural land there, before lake flooded most of it. The lake was created in 1953 after construction of Jablanica Dam near Jablanica in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake has an irregular elongated shape. Its width varies along its length. The lake is a popular vacation destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Swimming, boating and especially fishing are popular activities", "id": "13828307" }, { "contents": "Jablanica Dam\n\n\nThe Jablanica Dam is an arch-gravity dam on the Neretva River about northeast of Jablanica in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The dam was constructed between 1947 and 1955 with the primary purpose of hydroelectric power production. The power station was commissioned in two stages, from 1955 until 1958. The first generator was commissioned in February 1955. An upgrade in 2008 increased the installed capacity of the power station from 150 MW to 180 MW. The dam's power station is located about to the southeast near Jablanica", "id": "854706" }, { "contents": "Jablanik\n\n\nJablanik (Serbian Cyrillic: Јабланик) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Valjevo. Its highest peak \"Jablanik\" has an elevation of 1,275 meters(10001020_ above sea level. Jablanik is located at the source of the river Jablanica. It is separated from nearby Medvednik mountain by high pass Stolica, while the Debelo Brdo saddle separates it from Povlen in the southeast. The highest peak has the same name as the mountain itself - Jablanik, and is 1,275 m high. The hills around the peak are mainly", "id": "366162" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\nThe Nišava or Nishava (Bulgarian and , ) is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia, a right tributary, and with a length of 218 km also the longest one, of the South Morava. The Nišava originates in western Bulgaria, in the Stara Planina mountains (east of Kom Peak) near the village of Gintsi. Its source is close to the Serbian border. It enters Serbia after 67 km of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries. Because it flows through Gintsi, the upper course of the river is", "id": "9627075" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nAfter Mramorac village, the Jasenica spills over in several parallel flows, which continue until its confluence. After the Pridvorica and Vodice villages (on different arms of the river), the Jasenica reaches the town of Smederevska Palanka, the most populous settlement in its valley. This is also where the Kubršnica, its main tributary, flows into it from the left. The Jasenica then gently bends to the east, flowing into the Great Morava near the village of Veliko Orašje (the southern arm of the river flows through the town", "id": "3481502" }, { "contents": "Gruža (river)\n\n\nThe Gruža (Serbian Cyrillic: Гружа, ) is a river in central Serbia. The river is a 62 km long left tributary to the Zapadna Morava. The Gruža originates in the central part of the Rudnik mountain, right under the mountain's main settlement, the village of Rudnik, northeast of the town of Gornji Milanovac, central Serbia. The river flows south next to the village of Majdan, around the Rudnik mountain into the Takovo region and at the village of Nevade, just few kilometers away from Gornji Milanovac,", "id": "10971320" }, { "contents": "Rzav (Drina)\n\n\n(hamlet Panjak) on the Serbian-Bosnian border Crni Rzav meets the Jablanica river at the village Gornje Vardište and finally the river Beli Rzav at the village of Donje Vardište. The Rzav continues as the natural extension of the Beli Rzav, but since the Black Rzav is longer, the latter is considered to be the main headstream. It floes between the southernmost part of the Zvijezda mountain (\"Ponos\" peak) from the north and the Suha Gora mountain from the south, next to the villages of Prosjek (and", "id": "11540155" }, { "contents": "Ub (river)\n\n\nThe Ub (Serbian Cyrillic: Уб) is a river in western Serbia, a 57 km-long right and longest tributary to Tamnava river. The Ub originates from the Vlašić mountain in Podgorina region of west Serbia, near the village of Kasapo. From its source to the mouth, the river flows to the east, parallel to the river Tamnava, which it will eventually join. The villages located in the upper section of the river's flow are Družetić, Pambukovica and Čučuge, where the Ub slightly turns to the", "id": "2261401" }, { "contents": "Olomouc Region\n\n\nof the region is situated on the water level of the Morava River near to Kojetín in the Přerov District (190 m above sea level). The Morava river flows through the region and the majority of the region's territory belongs to Morava’s drainage basin. A small northern part of the region belongs to the drainage basin of Odra River, which flows to the Baltic Sea. The Olomouc Region offers a great variety of natural points of interest. Protected landscape area of the Jeseníky mountains offers a number of scenic places such", "id": "11419394" }, { "contents": "Jablanica, Bosnia and Herzegovina\n\n\nJablanica is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is situated on the Neretva river and Jablanica lake. The municipality of Jablanica is a major tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The municipality offer a wide variety of activities. The surrounding mountains such as Plasa, Čvrsnica and Prenj offer both hunting grounds and a variety of hiking trails. One popular hiking destination is \"Hajdučka Vrata\", a natural wonder, the product of wind", "id": "9009264" }, { "contents": "Krupá (Morava)\n\n\nKrupá (German: Graupa Bach) is a creek in Šumperk District, Moravia, left tributary of the Morava. Its length is 19,2 km and its drainage basin covers 112.7 km2. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 4.48 m³/s. The Krupá originates in Czech part of the Śnieżnik Mountains, 400 meters above sea level. The Krupá then goes south toward the town of Staré Město. It flows into the Morava river near Hanušovice town. River keeps its natural character with meanders and original riversides. A river bottom is", "id": "1745557" }, { "contents": "Oskava (river)\n\n\nOskava is a river in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic, left tributary of the Morava river. Its length is 50.3 km and its drainage basin covers 569 km. The mean annual discharge at its mouth is 3.53 m/s. The Oskava originates from southeast slope of Kamenná hora in Hrubý Jeseník, 215 meters above sea level. The river is surrounded by woods in upper reaches, flows through hills of Nízký Jeseník in middle reaches and its lower reaches is situated in swampy floodplain of Litovelské Pomoraví Protected Landscape Area.", "id": "8538845" }, { "contents": "Crna Trava\n\n\nCrna Trava ( ) is a village and municipality located in the Jablanica District of southern Serbia. According to 2011 census, the population of the village is 434 inhabitants, while population of the municipality is 1,663. This is the smallest by population and poorest municipality in Serbia. Crna Trava is famous for its migrant builders, who are considered the best in the region and are colloquially described as \"building half of Yugoslavia\". The name of the village in Serbian translates to \"Black Grass\". The origin of the name", "id": "18032485" }, { "contents": "Resavčina\n\n\n. At the village of Kušiljevo, the river receives the small stream of \"Beljeva\" from the left and turns northward, which is the general direction of its course for the rest of the flow. The river flows parallel to the Velika Morava river as its satellite flow, in the Morava's floodplain, so there are no settlements on the Resavica itself, but several large villages are located in its valley (Porodin, Žabari, Simićevo, Aleksandrovac Požarevački, Vlaški Do, Poljana), all of them located on the", "id": "4886223" }, { "contents": "Lugomir\n\n\nThe Lugomir (Serbian Cyrillic: Лугомир) is a river in central Serbia, a 57 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava river. The Lugomir originates from two headstreams, the Dulenska reka and the Županjevačka reka. The shorter headstream of Županjevačka reka (Cyrillic: \"Жупањевачка река\") originates from the mountain of Gledićke planine in southern Šumadija region of central Serbia. Its spring is just some 500 m away from the source of Lugomir's another headstream, the Dulenska reka. The river first flows to the east", "id": "5130918" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\ncities in Serbia, 10 km after which the Nišava empties into the Južna Morava. However, with the rapid growth of Niš in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs, the banks of the Nišava are urbanized almost to its mouth. After being divided into districts in 1992, the Nišava District (with Niš as administrative center) is named after the river. The river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area covers 4,086 km, of which about 73% in Serbia, the rest in Bulgaria", "id": "9627077" }, { "contents": "Upper Neretva\n\n\nsection\" begins from the confluence of the Neretva and the Rama river between Konjic and Jablanica where the Neretva suddenly takes a southern course and enter a largest canyons of its course, running through steep slopes of magnificent mountains of Prenj, Čvrsnica and Čabulja reaching 800–1200 meters in depth. From here Neretva flows toward the Adriatic Sea. Rivers of the Jezernica (also Tatinac), the Gornji and Donji Krupac, the Ljuta-Dindolka, the Jesenica, the Bjelimićka Rijeka, the Slatinica, the Račica, the Rakitnica, the Konjička", "id": "16797217" }, { "contents": "Resava (river)\n\n\nThe Resava (Serbian Cyrillic: Ресава) is a river in central Serbia, a 65 km-long right tributary to the Velika Morava. It also gives the name to the surrounding Resava region, the Resava Monastery, the coal mines in its valley and a popular tourist destination of Resava Cave. The Resava originates from the Homolje region in eastern Serbia. It springs out at an altitude of 1,100 m and flows westward between the mountains of Beljanica (on the north) and Kučaj (on the south). In its", "id": "15040274" }, { "contents": "A1 motorway (Serbia)\n\n\nJužna Morava river. Southern section (Niš–Leskovac–Vranje–Macedonian border) consists of 128 km that are in service, while additional 26 km are under construction. Construction of southern section has been completed by May 2019, and last sections opened for traffic on 18 May 2019: Highway passes through valley of South Morava, passes west of Niš, by Merošina and Leskovac, and after Grdelica built highway ends. 26 kilometers of highway under construction passes through Grdelica gorge, very difficult terrain. This sections is often considered", "id": "1785427" }, { "contents": "Čivelj\n\n\nČivelj is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in the municipality of Jablanica, Herzegovina-Neretva Canton, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1991, the village had six inhabitants, all of whom were Muslims. In 2013, Čivelj had 10 inhabitants. Tourism is solid. Civelj is placed 8 kilometres from Jablanica and it is placed on Jablanica lake. In lake there are 5 types of fishes including the most popular \"pastrmka\". The village was found in 1911. by local fishermen. Near Civelj", "id": "4645021" }, { "contents": "Neretva\n\n\nAlthough these streams are of low outflow, there are also numerous wellsprings rising on both sides of the canyon at the river banks, with high-capacity discharge. Three large hydroelectric power stations operate in this section of the Neretva, between Jablanica and Mostar, namely Grabovica HPP, Salakovac HPP and Mostar HPP. Jablanica lake is a large artificial lake on the Neretva river, right below Konjic where the Neretva expands into a wide valley. The river provided fertile, agricultural land before the lake flooded most of it. The lake", "id": "12890353" }, { "contents": "Jasenica (river)\n\n\nThe Jasenica (Serbian Cyrillic: Јасеница, ) is a river in central Serbia. It is long and is the left tributary of the Great Morava. This river gives the name to the surrounding region. The Jasenica originates from several streams, most notably the Đurinci (Cyrillic: Ђуринци) from Venčac mountain, and the Srebrenica (Cyrillic: Сребреница) from the northern slopes of the Rudnik mountain in central Serbia. At its origin, the river runs through the eastern border of the Kačer region. It flows to the southeast", "id": "3481500" }, { "contents": "South Morava\n\n\nin north Skopje, Macedonia. The streams Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is, after passing the Macedonian-Serbian border, known as the Binačka Morava. After 49 km it meets the Preševska Moravica at Bujanovac, and for the remainder, 246 km, flows as the South Morava. The South Morava belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and its own drainage area is 15,696 km², of which 1,237 km² is in Bulgaria (through its right tributary Nišava). Its average", "id": "15699472" }, { "contents": "Pešter\n\n\nRivers Uvac, Vapa, Jablanica and Grabovica flow through the plateau. In the geologic past, the field was a large lake, of which only a small Sjenica lake near the village of Tuzinje remained. The soil is mostly karst interspersed with pastures. Economy of the area relies primarily on cattle breeding, chiefly sheep. Pešter is famous for its dairy products, especially the \"Sjenica cheese\" (\"Sjenički sir\"), as well as lamb and prosciutto. The plateau is sparsely populated: most settlements are on the", "id": "16748290" }, { "contents": "Sredačka župa\n\n\nSredačka Župa (; \"county of Sredska\") is a remote geographical region, a valley, in southeastern Kosovo, below the Šar Mountains at the source of the Prizrenska Bistrica. The region, an oval basin, lies below the Šar Mountains, at the source, upper stream of the Prizrenska Bistrica (\"Prizren river\"). South of the region between the Prizren mountains and Koritnik mountain, lies the Gora region. It currently includes Sredska, Pousko, Jablanica, Lokvica, Rečane, Živinjane, Planjane, Nebregošte,", "id": "13372292" }, { "contents": "Binačka Morava\n\n\nBinačka Morava (Macedonian and Serbian Cyrillic: Биначка Морава; ) or (\"Mirusha\") is a river which flows in southeastern Kosovo and North Macedonia. It flows generally in the southwest to northeast direction, from Macedonian border to Bujanovac, where, after 49 km, meets Preševska Moravica, to create South Morava. The river begins in the mountain of Skopska Crna Gora, in North Macedonia, north of its capital Skopje. Streams of Ključevska reka and Slatinska reka join together to form the river Golema, which is,", "id": "12867615" }, { "contents": "Expulsion of the Albanians 1877–1878\n\n\nwar, the Albanian population depending on the area reacted differently to incoming Serbian forces by either offering resistance or fleeing toward nearby mountains and Ottoman Kosovo. Although most of these Albanians were expelled by Serbian forces, a small presence was allowed to remain in the Jablanica valley where their descendants live today. Serbs from Lab moved to Serbia during and after the first round of hostilities in 1876, while incoming Albanian refugees thereafter 1878 repopulated their villages. Albanian refugees also settled alongside the north-eastern Ottoman-Serbian border, in urban areas", "id": "1099553" }, { "contents": "Banjska River\n\n\nThe Banjska River ( / \"Banjska reka\", \"Baths River\"), is a river in southern Serbia, the right tributary of Toplica in which it flows near Kuršumlija. It rises under the far south-eastern branch of Kopaonik. It is 22 km long, with a river basin area of 155 km². The average flow at the mouth is 0,7 m³/s. The valley of the river is mostly ravines, while the basin is rich in forest. The Kuršumlija-Kuršumlijska Banja-Prepolac Pass-Podujevo-", "id": "14979528" }, { "contents": "Lebane\n\n\nby a catastrophic flood. Then unregulated river Jablanica, swollen after a long rainy period, broke on June 6, spilled out of its banks and caused enormous material damage Lebane. Flood toll was paid and human victims (killed two people). After this tragic event, with financial help, Lebane begins to industrialize faster, and the process of industrialization has caused more versatile and faster development of the city. According to the 2011 census, the municipality has 22,000 inhabitants. The ethnic composition of the municipality: The following table", "id": "17523935" }, { "contents": "Čvrsnica\n\n\nČvrsnica () is a mountain in the Dinarides of Bosnia and Herzegovina, located in northern Herzegovina, most of the mountain is located in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton municipalities of Mostar and Jablanica while the smaller part of the mountain, around 10% is located in the municipality of Posušje. The highest peak (Pločno) is 2228 metres. Čvrsnica is surrounded by the river Neretva from the east (20 km), its tributaries Doljanka (18 km) from the north and Drežanka (19.8 km) from the south,", "id": "6129606" }, { "contents": "Myjava (river)\n\n\nThe Myjava River is a river in western Slovakia and for a small part in the Czech Republic and left tributary of the Morava River. It rises in the White Carpathians near the village of Nová Lhota in Moravia, but crosses the Czech-Slovak border shortly afterwards and flows in a southern direction until the town of Myjava, where it enters the Myjava Hills and turns west. Near Sobotište it flows into the Záhorie Lowland and turns south until the village of Jablonica, turning northwest and from Senica it flows west, passing through", "id": "2099838" }, { "contents": "West Morava\n\n\nSouth and Great Morava's meridian (south-to-north) flow, the West Morava runs in an opposed, latitudinal (west-to-east) direction, dividing the region of Šumadija of the central Serbia from the southern parts of the country. Due to the West Morava's direction, it flows between many mountains, regions and sub-regions: The West Morava river valley, Zapadno Pomoravlje, is economically the most developed of all three Morava river valleys. With the valley of the Ibar, the West", "id": "7786624" }, { "contents": "Ralja (river)\n\n\nThe Ralja () is a river in Šumadija region of Serbia, a 51 km long left tributary to the Jezava, a tributary of the Great Morava river. It also gives its name to the surrounding Šumadija's subregion of Ralja. The Ralja originates from the northern part of the Kosmaj mountain, north of the village of Velika Ivanča, in the Sopot municipality of the City of Belgrade. Almost from the source, the river valley is a route for the Belgrade-Niš railway. At the villages of Popović and Mali", "id": "2491229" }, { "contents": "Sokobanjska Moravica\n\n\nBovan gorge carved by the river and is very popular local and regional tourist destination, especially among campers and fishermen, but the coastline is not put in order. The river continues to the south, in an inverse flow, and after the villages of Subotinac and Kraljevo, it empties into the Južna Morava at the town of Aleksinac. The lower section used to be a coal mining area too, just like the upper one, but the mines (Aleksinački Rudnik) are closed now. The Sokobanjska Moravica brlongs to the Black", "id": "1726358" }, { "contents": "Golijska Moravica\n\n\nThe Golijska Moravica or simply Moravica (Serbian Cyrillic: Голијска Моравица or Моравица) is a river in western Serbia. With a length of 98 km, it is the longer headstream of the Zapadna Morava (it forms it with the Đetinja), and thus, of the Velika Morava. Its name, Moravica, means \"little Morava\" in Serbian, and it also gives its name to the surrounding region and the modern Moravica District of Serbia. The Golijska Moravica originates from the western slopes of the Golija mountain and flows", "id": "5380325" }, { "contents": "Nišava\n\n\n. The Nišava is not navigable. It is not only the longest tributary of the Južna Morava, but also the largest one in terms of discharge (36 km/s). It has many smaller tributaries, the most important being the Temštica from the right, and the Jerma (or Sukovska reka), Crvena reka, Koritnička reka and Kutinska reka from the left. The Nišava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia: the route follows the valleys of the Morava", "id": "9627078" }, { "contents": "Toplica (river)\n\n\nThe Toplica (Serbian Cyrillic: Топлица, ) is a river in southern Serbia. The river is 130 km long and gives its name to the region it flows through, which constitutes most of the modern Toplica District of Serbia. The Toplica originates under the name of \"Duboka\" from the eastern slopes of the Kopaonik mountain, just south of the highest peak, Pančićev vrh. It flows to the southeast, on the western slopes of the Lepa Gora mountain, next to the villages of Merćez, Selova, Žuč,", "id": "19530451" }, { "contents": "Great Morava\n\n\nof the Velika Morava's right tributary Resava). The average discharge of the Velika Morava on its confluence with Danube is 255 m³/s (120 m³/s brought by Zapadna Morava, 100 m³/s by Južna Morava, and 35 m³/s amounted by the Velika Morava itself). Tributaries of the Velika Morava are short, the longest one being the Jasenica (79 km) and others rarely exceeding 50 km. Right tributaries are: Jovanovačka reka, Crnica, Ravanica, Resava and Resavica (or Resavčina). Left tributaries are more numerous,", "id": "2295702" }, { "contents": "Vevčani\n\n\nVevčani () is a village in the Republic of North Macedonia. It is the only settlement and seat of Vevčani Municipality. The village of Vevčani is found in the southwestern range at the foot of the Jablanica mountain range. It is situated from 800 – 950 metres above sea level. The village is located 14 km North-West of the town of Struga. The village is situated near the villages of Oktisi, Velešta, Podgorci, Gorna Belica with the Albanian border to the West of the village. The famous Vevčani", "id": "5042995" } ]
Joseph Jenne Cannon ( May 22 , 1877 -- November 5 , 1945 ) was a [START_ENT] Utah [END_ENT] politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ( LDS Church ) . He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family . As a young man , Cannon served as a for the LDS Church in Europe . He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903 . Lyman and Cannon also similarly dedicated Finland in 1903 . In the 1908 election , Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from . He served one term , from 1909 to 1911 . Cannon was not formally associated with any political party . From 1931 to 1934 , Cannon was the editor of the Deseret News , a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church . His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church 's British Mission . Cannon served in this capacity for three years , until 1937 . Immediately following his return to Utah , Cannon was asked to become the first assistant to George Q. Morris , the general superintendent of the church 's . Cannon served in this capacity until his death from pancreatic cancer
b15d0e6a-6be7-4f03-9992-6a5d092ea8d6_Joseph_J._Canno:0
[{"answer": "Utah", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "31716", "title": "Utah"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nJoseph Jenne Cannon (May 22, 1877 – November 5, 1945) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Europe. He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in St. Petersburg and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903. Lyman and Cannon", "id": "13710370" }, { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nalso similarly dedicated Finland in 1903. In the 1908 election, Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. He served one term, from 1909 to 1911. Cannon was not formally associated with any political party. From 1931 to 1934, Cannon was the editor of the \"Deseret News\", a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church. His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church's British Mission. Cannon served in this", "id": "13710371" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nSylvester Quayle Cannon (June 10, 1877 – May 29, 1943) was an American businessman, engineer, and religious leader who served as the sixth presiding bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1925 to 1938 and a member of church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1939 until his death. He was the son of George Q. Cannon, an apostle and member of the church's First Presidency. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. He studied", "id": "2194372" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nJohn Quayle Cannon (April 19, 1857 – January 14, 1931) was an editor-in-chief of the \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, Utah, and a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He also served as a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army during the Spanish–American War. He was the son of LDS Church apostle George Q. Cannon and Elizabeth Hoagland. He was married to Elizabeth \"Annie\" Wells Cannon. Cannon", "id": "7202721" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nFrank Jenne Cannon (January 25, 1859July 25, 1933) was the first United States Senator from Utah, who served from 1896 to 1899. Born in Salt Lake City, he was the eldest child of Sarah Jenne Cannon and George Q. Cannon. His father was an Apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and later was a member of its First Presidency. After attending the school in Salt Lake City, he studied at University of Deseret, graduating at the age of 19", "id": "11000345" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nEdwin Quayle \"Ted\" Cannon, Jr. (May 6, 1918 – April 6, 2005) was a Utah politician and businessman and was a prominent leader and missionary in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was among the first missionaries in the LDS Church to preach to black people in Africa and was part of the first group missionaries sent to establish official congregations of the LDS Church in West Africa. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Edwin Q. Cannon,", "id": "9582822" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Ivins Cannon (March 9, 1920 – August 4, 2009) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1986 to 1991. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, Cannon was the son of George J. Cannon and Lucy Grant Cannon, a leader of the youth in the LDS Church. His maternal grandfather was Heber J. Grant, the seventh president of the LDS Church. His paternal grandfather was Abraham H. Cannon, who was a member of the church", "id": "8339578" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nLucy Grant Cannon (October 22, 1880 – May 7, 1966) was the fourth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1937 to 1948. She was a member of the general presidency of the Young Women from 1923 to 1948, serving as a counselor to two presidents. Lucy Grant was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Lucy Stringham and LDS Church apostle Heber J. Grant. She served as a church missionary in the Western", "id": "1681853" }, { "contents": "George Mousley Cannon\n\n\nTrust Company. He served as a delegate to the 1895 Utah State Constitutional Convention and chaired the committee which formulated the articles on taxation and public debt. In 1896, Cannon was elected to the Utah State Senate and served as its first president. When The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) modified stake boundaries in 1900, dividing the new Granite Stake off from the Salt Lake Stake, Cannon became the Sunday School Superintendent of the new stake. From 1901 until after 1930, Cannon served as", "id": "8629874" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nat the University of Utah and then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received a B.S. degree in mining engineering. In 1899, Cannon began an LDS Church mission in Belgium. Cannon then served from 1900 to 1902 as president of the church's Netherlands–Belgium Mission. Cannon also served as Francis M. Lyman's secretary on a three-month trip to many nations along the Mediterranean and in the Middle East. From 1916 to 1925, Cannon served as president of the Pioneer Stake in Salt Lake City. In", "id": "2194373" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\nAbraham Hoagland Cannon (also reported as Abram H. Cannon) (March 12, 1859 – July 19, 1896) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. His parents were George Q. Cannon, a Latter Day Saints apostle, and Elizabeth Hoagland, daughter of Abraham Hoagland. Cannon studied at Deseret University. Later, he studied architecture under Obed Taylor. Cannon married Sarah A.", "id": "9035314" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nSr. and Luella Wareing. He was born at his parents' home because of the 1918 influenza pandemic. Cannon's paternal grandfather was George Q. Cannon, a Mormon pioneer and prominent leader in the LDS Church. Cannon was raised in Salt Lake City. In 1937, Cannon went on a mission for the LDS Church to Nazi Germany. He was president of a branch of the church in Berlin in 1939 when the LDS Church evacuated its missionaries from Europe at the beginning of World War II. Cannon finished his mission in", "id": "9582823" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\n. Callville was submerged when Lake Mead was filled. In 1869 and 1870, Cannon served a second mission in the Eastern United States. In April 1876, Cannon became president of the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. He served in this position until April 1, 1904. After his time as stake president, Cannon served as a patriarch in the church. Cannon was the mayor of St. George, Utah Territory in 1861 and 1862. In 1896, after Utah had become a U.S. state, he stood for election", "id": "7202652" }, { "contents": "Donald Q. Cannon\n\n\nDonald Quayle Cannon (born 1936) is a retired professor at Brigham Young University who specializes in Mormon history, particularly early Mormon history and international Mormon history. As a young man, Cannon was a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Germany. Cannon earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Utah. Cannon holds a Ph.D. from Clark University. In the late 1960s, he taught at the University of Southern Maine. In the LDS Church he has", "id": "10057919" }, { "contents": "George Goddard (Mormon)\n\n\nwas the clerk to LDS Church presiding bishop Edward Hunter. From 1874 to 1884, Goddard was the clerk of the LDS Church's biannual general conferences. In 1872, Goddard became the inaugural first assistant to George Q. Cannon, the first superintendent of the Deseret Sunday School Union. Goddard served in this capacity for 26 years, until his death in 1899. Goddard was also a member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and a patriarch in the church. He died in Salt Lake City and was buried at Salt Lake City Cemetery.", "id": "7701639" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nuntil their arrival in Utah. In 1854, Cannon went on a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to the Eastern United States, where he assisted John Taylor in publishing a periodical entitled \"The Mormon\". He also preached and baptized in Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware. Cannon returned to Utah Territory due to the troubles connected with the Utah War. In 1864, Cannon helped establish Call's Landing on the Colorado River, later known as Callville, Nevada", "id": "7202651" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nJanath Russell Cannon (October 28, 1918 – July 5, 2007) was a counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was also a prominent missionary in the church and was among the first to preach to black people in Africa. Born in Ogden, Utah, Janath Russell was educated at Wellesley College. In 1941, she married Edwin Q. Cannon in the Salt Lake Temple. From 1971 to 1974,", "id": "9582964" }, { "contents": "Joseph A. Cannon\n\n\nserved as an assistant administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from 1983 to 1985. Joseph A. Cannon was born on July 31, 1949. Cannon served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Ireland, including on the Isle of Man, the ancestral homeland of the Cannons. Cannon received a degree in political science and, in 1977, a law degree from Brigham Young University. Cannon served as a law clerk in Salt Lake City for U.S. District", "id": "7202830" }, { "contents": "Elaine A. Cannon\n\n\nElaine Anderson Cannon (April 9, 1922 – May 19, 2003) was the eighth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 to 1984. Cannon has been a writer and an editor and is the author of over 50 books. Elaine Anderson was born to Aldon Joseph and Minnie Egan Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a teenager, she started writing a daily column aimed at teenagers for the \"Deseret News\". She", "id": "1682052" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nAdele Morris Cannon Howells (January 11, 1886 – April 14, 1951) was the fourth general president of the Primary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1943 until her death of rheumatic heart disease. She contributed to \"The Children's Friend\" magazine, as well as the fundraising for the Children's Primary Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. Adele Morris Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to George Mousley Cannon and Marian Adelaide Morris. She", "id": "1336419" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\nGeorgius Young Cannon (March 6, 1892 – March 29, 1987) was a 20th-century architect in the American West who operated principally out of Salt Lake City, Utah. Cannon trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), graduating in 1918. He then joined the army and later returned to Utah to intern with the architectural firm Ware & Treganza and Cannon & Fetzer. He served two missions to Germany for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). For a time", "id": "12786285" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Quayle Cannon (January 11, 1827 – April 12, 1901) was an early member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), and served in the First Presidency under four successive presidents of the church: Brigham Young, John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. He was the church's chief political strategist, and was dubbed \"the Mormon premier\" and \"the Mormon Richelieu\" by the press. He was also a five", "id": "19825263" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nwas the oldest of nine children, and her father George Cannon was the first president of the Utah State Senate. As a child, Cannon suffered from rheumatic fever. She enjoyed reading in her spare time and horseback riding. She was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Cannon attended schools in Salt Lake City and graduated from the LDS High School and Business College in 1903. She attended the University of Utah and studied physical education and graduated with her bachelor's degree in 1909. Cannon", "id": "1336420" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nis one of the few general authorities of the LDS Church to have been excommunicated. From 1889 until 1892, Cannon was the editor of the \"Ogden Standard\". From October 1892 until April 1898, he was the editor in chief of the \"Deseret News\". After the Spanish–American War he returned to work at the \"Deseret News\" and served as an executive editor of the newspaper off-and-on until his death. He was much beloved by his co-workers. Cannon was a member", "id": "7202722" }, { "contents": "Tracy Y. Cannon\n\n\nLatter-day Saints. In 1939, he was made second assistant to Melvin J. Ballard, supervisor of the committee. From 1915 to 1927, Cannon was a member of the high council of the Pioneer Stake of the LDS Church. In 1917, he became a member of the Deseret Sunday School Union General Board. From 1930 through 1936, Cannon was bishop of the Cannon Ward in Salt Lake City. Cannon was an editor of the 1927 LDS Church hymnal. In 1925, Cannon was appointed director of the McCune School", "id": "12019030" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe church's Welsh-language periodical, \"Udgorn Seion\". From 1867 to 1874, Cannon was the managing editor of the \"Deseret News\". It was under his direction that the newspaper was first published on a daily basis. In 1866, Cannon began publication of a magazine for youth and young adult Latter-day Saints called \"The Juvenile Instructor\". He owned and published this magazine until his death; in 1901 his family sold the magazine to the LDS Church's Sunday School organization. The periodical was", "id": "19825272" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nCannon and her husband were heads of the Switzerland Mission of the LDS Church. Upon their return to Utah in 1974, Cannon became the first counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the church's Relief Society. Cannon served in this capacity until 1978, when she was released so that she and her husband could become the first missionaries of the church to preach in \"black Africa\". They — along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey — preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 27", "id": "9582965" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\nan LDS Church organization responsible for educating young members of the LDS church, and the magazine was the first church periodical oriented toward youth. Cannon opened the George Q. Cannon & Sons bookstore in 1867 to sell the magazine and other publications of an uplifting nature. Cannon believed that secular novels did not reflect Latter-day Saint values. In the 1880s, Cannon expanded with a branch in Ogden, Utah. It is not known how many books Cannon & Sons actually published itself. In this era, authors commonly self-published", "id": "18344085" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n. Cannon was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. Cannon fathered 32 children, some of whom are Abraham H. Cannon, John Q. Cannon, and Sylvester Q. Cannon, who all became general authorities of the LDS Church; Frank J. Cannon, Utah's first U.S. Senator; and Lewis T. Cannon and Georgius Y. Cannon, prominent architects in Utah. Some of Cannon's prominent descendants include Howard Cannon, U.S. Senator from Nevada from 1959 to 1983 and Chris Cannon, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1997 to", "id": "19825281" }, { "contents": "Salt Lake City Council Hall\n\n\nwho was then the official architect for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Built at First South and 120 East (more on Salt Lake City's coordinate system), sandstone for the structure was delivered from Red Butte Canyon on Utah's first chartered railroad. The well-furnished Greek revival building was completed at a cost of $70,000. In January 1866, City Hall was dedicated by George Q. Cannon, a prominent LDS leader. Many other LDS leaders attended the dedication including Brigham", "id": "19382830" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\n, Cannon moved to Los Angeles and worked as the office manager of his MIT schoolmate Wallace Neff. He later returned to Utah and designed numerous buildings, mostly residences, and some of which remain on the National Register of Historic Places. Among his works were meetinghouses of the LDS Church and other civic buildings. Cannon served on a church-appointed board of six architects that oversaw the construction of the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple. Cannon was the youngest of 32 children born to LDS Church leader George Q. Cannon. His mother,", "id": "12786286" }, { "contents": "Karl G. Maeser\n\n\nin the General Superintendency of the Deseret Sunday School Union. He was the Second Assistant to General Superintendent George Q. Cannon from July 1894 to January 1899. He then served as the First Assistant to Cannon from January 1899 until February 1901. Maeser also participated in the Utah constitutional convention after Abraham Smoot's death in 1895. He proposed an article to support prohibition, but later backed down. Missionaries from the LDS Church were removed from California in 1858 due to the Utah War. Missionary work resumed in 1892. Maeser presided over", "id": "11030473" }, { "contents": "Frank B. Woodbury\n\n\nFrank Bartlett Woodbury (December 27, 1867 – December 21, 1962) was a leader of and an Acting Presiding Patriarch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), one of only three church members to hold this position in church history. Born in St. George, Utah Territory, to Orin Nelson Woodbury and Ann Cannon, Woodbury served in many capacities in the church on a local level. Some, but not all, LDS Church sources list Woodbury as \"Acting Presiding Patriarch\" of", "id": "8238754" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand 1958 and served three full terms. From 1964 to 1971, Cannon was a bishop of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. From 1971 to 1974, he was the president of the Switzerland Mission of the church. In 1978, three weeks after the LDS Church announced that it would no longer impose restrictions of black people receiving the priesthood or participating in temple ordinances, Cannon traveled to Africa on behalf of the church with Merrill J. Bateman to assess the prospects for church missionary work and growth in \"black Africa\"", "id": "9582825" }, { "contents": "Amasa Lyman\n\n\n). Lyman served as the first mayor of San Bernardino. In 1860, Young appointed three of the twelve apostles—Lyman, Charles C. Rich, and George Q. Cannon—to the presidency of the church's European Mission. On March 16, 1862, Lyman preached a sermon in Dundee, Scotland, which all but denied the reality of and the necessity for the atonement of Jesus Christ, which is a central tenet of the LDS Church. His speech appeared to have been overlooked for years, but on January 21", "id": "12068047" }, { "contents": "Mark E. Petersen\n\n\nMark Edward Petersen (November 7, 1900 – January 11, 1984) was an American news editor and religious leader who served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1944 until his death. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, he filled the vacancy in the Quorum caused by the excommunication of Richard R. Lyman. Petersen had become managing editor of the church-owned \"Deseret News\" in 1935 and editor in 1941.", "id": "2692480" }, { "contents": "Thomas C. Griggs\n\n\nthe LDS Church's Aaronic priesthood; his call to this office was given by Apostle George Q. Cannon. With the outbreak of the American Civil War, the Griggs heeded the counsel of LDS Church leaders to move to Utah Territory. The Griggs crossed the plains in Joseph Horne's Mormon pioneer company in 1861. Griggs first joined the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in 1866 when Charles John Thomas was the director. Griggs would continue as a member of the choir until his death in 1903. While Robert Sands was the conductor of the choir", "id": "9481149" }, { "contents": "Charles Clarence Neslen\n\n\nfrom Germany and he was imprisoned in Danzig. He served as president of the Königsberg District of the LDS Church for a part of his mission. Neslen was a member of the Democratic Party and a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1912. Neslen worked a total of 15 years for the \"Deseret News\". He was also a realtor and for a time served as secretary of the Salt Lake Real Estate Association. On October 26, 1905, Neslen married Grace T. Cannon, a daughter of George Q. Cannon.", "id": "21092533" }, { "contents": "Stephen L. Chipman\n\n\nStephen L. Chipman (1864–1945) was a member of the Utah State Legislature in 1903 and a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Utah County. He was also the first president of the Salt Lake Temple who was not also an apostle in the LDS Church. Chipman studied at Brigham Young Academy (the predecessor of Brigham Young University (BYU)) as a youth. From 1885 to 1887 he served as a Mormon missionary in the Southern States Mission of the LDS Church", "id": "15228384" }, { "contents": "Mountain Meadows massacre and Mormon public relations\n\n\nCannon, then president of the LDS California Mission. In the October 13, 1857 edition of Cannon's San Francisco newspaper \"The Western Standard\", Cannon responded to initial news reports of involvement by Mormons by charging the responsible journalists with writing \"reckless and malignant slanders\", despite knowing that the southern Utah Mormons were \"as innocent of [the massacre] as the child unborn\". The church's official newspaper in Salt Lake City, \"The Deseret News\", was initially slow to comment on the massacre,", "id": "22212632" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas the second-most senior apostle of the church after the death of Woodruff, Cannon did not become President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, as would be the practice in the LDS Church today. Rather, because Cannon was a member of the First Presidency, the church simply appointed the next senior apostle of the church—Brigham Young, Jr.—to be the quorum president. (Under today's practices, Cannon would have been appointed the president of the quorum and Young would have been appointed acting president.) Cannon", "id": "19825274" }, { "contents": "Clifford E. Young\n\n\nClifford Earle Young (December 7, 1883 – August 21, 1958) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1941 until his death. Young was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, the son of LDS Church leader Seymour B. Young. From 1905 to 1908, he served as a Mormon missionary in England and Germany. In 1928, Young became the president of the Alpine Stake of the LDS Church in Utah. In 1934, he joined the", "id": "8315768" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n33. Upon his joining the Quorum of the Twelve, Cannon was called to preside over the church's European Mission. Cannon's mission in Europe ended when he was recalled by Young in 1862 to work in Washington, D.C., to assist in the church's promotion of Utah Territory's bid for statehood. At the adjournment of the 1862 congressional session, Cannon again left for Europe to preside over the mission. In this capacity, Cannon was the editor of the \"Millennial Star\" and, for a short time,", "id": "19825271" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nfrom the federal authorities. In September 1888, Cannon surrendered himself and pleaded guilty at trial to charges of unlawful cohabitation under the Edmunds Act. As a result, Cannon served nearly six months in Utah's federal penitentiary. Cannon was pardoned in 1894 by U.S. President Grover Cleveland. Cannon died on April 12, 1901, in Monterey, California, at 74 years of age. Had he lived a few months longer, he would have become the President of the LDS Church: Lorenzo Snow died on October 10 of that year", "id": "19825280" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Isle of Man\n\n\nand Idaho which descends from the 19th century marriage of George Cannon and Ann Quayle before their emigration from Peel, Isle of Man. The family's most notable member was their oldest son George Quayle Cannon. The family is connected by marriage to the Bennion, Taylor, Wells and Young political families. LDS Membership statistics as of January 1, 2011 for the Isle of Man. The nation of the Isle of Man does not have its own mission. Instead it is served by an English mission. Five out of the six", "id": "7797107" }, { "contents": "The Contributor (LDS magazine)\n\n\nThe Contributor was an independent publication associated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) between 1879 and 1896. It was a monthly periodical and sought to represent the Young Men's and Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Associations (YMMIA and YLMIA respectively), the youth organizations of the LDS Church at the time. It was founded by Junius F. Wells, the inaugural head of the YMMIA. Abraham H. Cannon became editor when the magazine was purchased by the Cannon Publishing Company in 1892. With the", "id": "505110" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe official organ of the Sunday School until 1930, when it was replaced with \"The Instructor\". Cannon also served as the first general superintendent of the church's Sunday School from 1867 until his death. On April 8, 1873, Cannon became a member of the church's First Presidency when he was called as the first counselor by Brigham Young. Cannon went on to serve as counselor to three more presidents of the church: he was First Counselor to John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. Although Cannon", "id": "19825273" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\ntogether. Prior to her service in the general Primary presidency, Clara Cannon was a counselor in the presidencies of the Primary and Relief Society in the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. When Louie B. Felt became the first general presidency of the Primary, Matilda M. Barratt and Cannon were selected as Felt's counselors. Cannon was a counselor until 1895; the next year she was succeeded in the position by Josephine R. West. Clara Moses Cannon died of throat cancer in Centerville, Utah, aged 87 and was interred in", "id": "10663424" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nScouts of America and served in the organization's Great Salt Lake Council. Prior to his call as a general authority, Cannon served in the church as a bishop, stake president, patriarch, temple sealer, and regional representative. He was also the president of the church's Central British Mission from 1966 to 1969. From 1969 to 1972, Cannon was an assistant and counselor to W. Jay Eldredge, the general superintendent of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association. Cannon became a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy", "id": "8339580" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe Nauvoo Legion. During this time, Cannon served as printer of the \"Deseret News\" while it was publishing in exile in Fillmore, Utah. After the Utah War, he was called as president of the church's Eastern States Mission. The murder of Parley P. Pratt in 1857 created a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. That vacancy was not filled until Brigham Young called Cannon to the apostleship three years later. Cannon was ordained to the priesthood office of apostle on August 26, 1860, at age", "id": "19825270" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nin the Sandwich Islands (later known as the Kingdom of Hawaii), where he served for four years. While in the islands, Cannon converted many Native Hawaiians. One of the most notable was Jonatana Napela, who assisted Cannon in translating the Book of Mormon into Hawaiian. Joseph F. Smith, a future church president, would follow Cannon and serve in Hawaii one year later. Returning to Utah Territory, Cannon married Elizabeth Hoagland (daughter of Abraham Hoagland and his wife.) He was almost immediately called to assist apostle", "id": "19825268" }, { "contents": "Ronald E. Poelman\n\n\nRonald Eugene Poelman (May 10, 1928 – November 19, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 until his death. In 1984, he delivered a controversial sermon in the LDS Church's general conference which the church redacted before publishing. Poelman was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to a Latter-day Saint family. As a young man, he served as a Mormon missionary in the LDS Church's Netherlands Mission. He began his", "id": "4765396" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\n. He would marry Martha Brown of Ogden in 1878. In 1891 he helped to organize the Utah Republican Party. After a failed bid to become delegate from the Utah Territory, he succeeded and served from March 4, 1895, to January 4, 1896. Cannon was chosen in 1896 to serve as senator by the Utah Legislature in spite of LDS church leadership favoring his father for the job. He served in the United States Senate, initially, as a member of the Republican Party; however, he later became a", "id": "11000346" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nmember of the Silver Republican Party, founded by his successor (and future employer at \"The Salt Lake Tribune\") Thomas Kearns. Cannon lost re-election in 1899. Utah's state legislators indicated they would not support Cannon for re-election shortly after the November 1898 elections. Cannon had voted against the Dingley Act, which would have raised tariffs on sugar and helped the Utah sugar industry. It was strongly supported by the LDS Church hierarchy, who now opposed his re-election. Other factors were his support", "id": "11000347" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand Ghana. The first convert baptized in Africa was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and his wife were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' centre in Nauvoo, Illinois. For three months in 1989, Cannon was the interim president of the LDS Church's Germany Hamburg Mission; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. After his interim service as mission president, Cannon was the second president of the Frankfurt Germany Temple from 1989 to", "id": "9582827" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nCounselor to William B. Preston, the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church; he served in this position between 1884 and 1886. In 1884, shortly after Cannon had become a general authority, a sensationalized news story by Joseph Lippman in the \"Salt Lake Tribune\" alleged that Cannon had taken his wife's sister Louie Wells as a plural wife. Lippman suggested that Cannon and Wells had been married in the Logan Temple. In fact, there had been no such marriage, though it was later revealed that Cannon and Wells had", "id": "7202724" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nbranches of the LDS Church in Nigeria and Ghana. The first convert baptized in Nigeria was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and her husband were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' center in Nauvoo, Illinois. In 1989, they served as interim leaders of the Germany Hamburg Mission of the church; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. From 1989 to 1992, Cannon was the matron of the Frankfurt Germany Temple while her husband", "id": "9582966" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\n's Quorum of the Twelve. Abraham was a son of George Q. Cannon, an early member of the church's First Presidency. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary in the church's Central States Mission. After his mission, he served in the United States Air Force during the Second World War. In 1946, he began attending Brigham Young University (BYU). After graduating from BYU, Cannon became a vice president of Beneficial Life Insurance Company in Salt Lake City. He was active in the Boy", "id": "8339579" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\n1925, Cannon became the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church, succeeding Charles W. Nibley. Cannon's counselors were David A. Smith and John Wells. In 1938, Cannon was released as Presiding Bishop and was succeeded by LeGrand Richards. At the same time, Cannon was ordained an apostle and made an \"associate\" of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, a unique position that had never been filled before. When Quorum member Melvin J. Ballard died the next year, Cannon became a full member of the Quorum; he served", "id": "2194374" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\nClarissa Cordelia (\"Clara\") Moses Cannon (April 21, 1839 – August 21, 1926) was a Mormon pioneer and a member of the first-ever general presidency of the Primary organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). She was the second counselor to general president Louie B. Felt from 1880 to 1895. Clara Moses was born in Westfield, Massachusetts. In 1846 she took the six-month journey on the ship \"Brooklyn\" from New York City to San", "id": "10663422" }, { "contents": "Leonora Cannon Taylor\n\n\nLeonora Cannon Taylor (October 6, 1796–December 9, 1868) was a member of the Relief Society organization at the time of its origin and the first wife of John Taylor, the third president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). On October 6, 1796 in Peel, Isle of Man, Leonora Cannon was born to George Cannon and Leonora Callister. As the oldest daughter in the family, when Leonora's father died when she was thirteen she went away to London to work", "id": "16190675" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\ntheir books, which were then distributed by others. However, Cannon & Sons distributed several important books through their stores and mail order (see table). The company had extensive ties to the LDS Church-owned newspaper, the \"Deseret News.\" Five of Cannon's sons held important positions in the paper, and Cannon himself was editor between 1867 and 1872, and again while temporarily owning the paper from 1892 to 1898. Nearly every George Q. Cannon & Sons book was printed on the \"Deseret News\" press", "id": "18344086" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nof the Utah Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Cannon was the oldest son of George Q. Cannon and the one most expected to follow in his prominent father's footsteps in politics, church office, and journalism. Heber J. Grant once said of Cannon: \"There probably is not a young man in the church who had had more opportunities and advantages extended to him educationally, spiritually, and every other way than John Q. Cannon.\" At the age of 27, Cannon was called to serve as the Second", "id": "7202723" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nMartha Maria \"Mattie\" Hughes Cannon (July 1, 1857 – July 10, 1932) was a Welsh-born immigrant to the United States, a polygamous wife, physician, Utah women's rights advocate and suffragist, and Utah State Senator. Her family immigrated to the United States as converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and traveled West to settle in Utah territory with other Mormons. She started working at the age of fourteen. At sixteen she enrolled in the University", "id": "15993465" }, { "contents": "Church Office Building\n\n\nThe Church Office Building is a 28-story building in Salt Lake City, Utah, which houses the administrative support staff for the lay ministry of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) throughout the world. The building is 420 ft (128 m) tall at roof level and is located within the Temple Square complex on the corner of North Temple and State Street. The building was designed by George Cannon Young at a cost of US$31 million to build. Construction took place from 1962 to 1972", "id": "13754819" }, { "contents": "John Lyman Smith\n\n\nJohn Lyman Smith (November 17, 1828 – February 21, 1898) was an American politician and Mormon missionary. He served as a member of the Utah Territory's Legislative Assembly's House of Representatives for Iron County, Utah, from 1852 to 1853, and the Great Salt Lake County, Utah, from 1853 to 1855. Cousin of the founder of the Latter Day Saint Movement, Joseph Smith, Smith was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) who traveled to the", "id": "18219861" }, { "contents": "Francis M. Lyman\n\n\nFrancis Marion Lyman (January 12, 1840 – November 18, 1916) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was the President of the Quorum from 1903 until his death. Lyman's father and son were also apostles in the church: his father was Amasa M. Lyman and his son was Richard R. Lyman. Both his father and son were excommunicated from the church while serving as apostles. Francis M. Lyman was born as", "id": "20761093" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nAngus Munn Cannon (May 17, 1834 – June 7, 1915) was an early Latter Day Saint leader and Mormon pioneer. Cannon was born in Liverpool, Lancashire, England. His Manx parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 1840, being baptized by his uncle John Taylor. In 1842, the Cannon family went to Nauvoo, Illinois, United States. By 1849, they were in Utah Territory. Cannon was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon and their lives followed very similar paths up", "id": "7202650" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\naffairs while Taylor recovered. This training would serve him well in later life. Cannon's father died in 1845. In 1846, Taylor traveled to England to organize the affairs of the church after Smith's death. Meanwhile, Cannon accompanied Taylor's wife and family as they moved to Winter Quarters, Nebraska. When Taylor returned, Cannon traveled with the entire Taylor family to the Salt Lake Valley, arriving in October 1847. In 1849, Cannon was asked by church president Brigham Young to serve as a missionary for the church", "id": "19825267" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nstaying in the position until December 31, 1903. Cannon attempted to prohibit children not vaccinated from attending school in case of a disease outbreak. The Board of Health sent out vaccines; however, the \"Deseret News\" spread information that vaccines weren't safe. LDS Church leaders were divided on the subject. One apostle, Brigham Young Jr. was very vocal in his opinions, writing in the \"Deseret News\" about the evils of vaccinations. The influence of the \"Deseret News\" and Mormon religious leaders limited how many", "id": "15993490" }, { "contents": "Billy Johnson (Mormon)\n\n\nLDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball announced Official Declaration 2 which extended the priesthood to all worthy male members of the church regardless of race or color. In gratitude, Johnson sent a letter to Kimball, explaining that God had prepared the people in Ghana, asking him to send missionaries to the members. Kimball responded to his pleas and sent the first called missionaries Rendell N. Mabey and Rachel Mabey. They joined Edwin Q. Cannon and Janath R. Cannon. Johnson was finally baptized into the LDS Church on December 9, 1978. He", "id": "4108521" }, { "contents": "Juvenile Instructor\n\n\ncatechisms on the Bible, Book of Mormon, and Doctrine and Covenants; musical compositions; illustrations; stories; editorial teachings; and other aids to gospel instruction. It was the first magazine for children published in the United States west of the Mississippi River. For much of its history, \"The Juvenile Instructor\" was owned by the Cannon family. Its first editor was George Q. Cannon, an apostle in the LDS Church. Cannon and his family continued to publish the magazine privately until January 1, 1901, when the", "id": "9210614" }, { "contents": "Joseph F. Smith\n\n\nand as second counselor to Lorenzo Snow (1898–1901). Smith was appointed first counselor to Snow on the death of first counselor George Q. Cannon, but, as Snow himself died only four days later, Smith never served in that position. He succeeded Snow as president of the LDS Church and president of the Salt Lake Temple. He served as president of the temple until 1911, when he transferred the responsibility to Anthon H. Lund. Smith also served as editor of the \"Improvement Era\" and \"Juvenile Instructor\",", "id": "4117444" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in California\n\n\nQ. Cannon began publication in San Francisco of the \"Western Standard\", a weekly periodical supportive of the Church. The first colonization from Utah to California came in 1851 when a company of about 450 saints and slaves under direction of Elders Amasa M. Lyman and Charles C. Rich of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles settled at what is now San Bernardino. The colony was the final settlement in a string of Mormon communities extending from Salt Lake City in an area known as Deseret. The community thrived, and on July 6,", "id": "22187256" }, { "contents": "Sunday School (LDS Church)\n\n\nout. On November 11, 1867, Young and church leaders Daniel H. Wells, George A. Smith, Wilford Woodruff, George Q. Cannon, and Brigham Young, Jr. met and organized the Parent Sunday School Union. Young appointed Cannon as the first general superintendent of the Sunday School, a position he would hold until his death in 1901. In 1872, the Sunday School organization was renamed the Deseret Sunday School Union. The organized Sunday School addressed lesson topics and source materials, grading, prizes and rewards, use of hymns", "id": "8671425" }, { "contents": "Hugh W. Pinnock\n\n\nHugh Wallace Pinnock (January 15, 1934 – December 16, 2000) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Pinnock was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Western States Mission. Pinnock graduated from University of Utah in 1958, where he became a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity and Owl and Key. Prior to his call to the First", "id": "8519001" }, { "contents": "Charles W. Penrose\n\n\nwas organized Penrose was called as a member of the high council. In 1877, Penrose became the assistant editor of the LDS Church-owned \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, working under George Q. Cannon. Penrose was known for his writing, including missionary tracts and lyrics of Latter-day Saint hymns, including \"God of Our Fathers\", \"O Ye Mountains High\", and \"Up, Awake, Ye Defenders of Zion\". In 1880, Penrose became the editor-in-chief of", "id": "2194239" }, { "contents": "Rulon S. Wells\n\n\nRulon Seymour Wells (July 7, 1854 – May 7, 1941) was a Utah politician and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1893 until his death. Wells was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to LDS Church leader Daniel H. Wells (1814–1891) and Louisa Free (1824–1886). In 1875, Wells travelled to Europe as a Mormon missionary and worked primarily in Germany and Switzerland. He returned to the United States in 1877. On", "id": "8315459" }, { "contents": "G. Homer Durham\n\n\nGeorge Homer Durham (February 4, 1911 – January 10, 1985) was an American academic administrator and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Durham was born in Parowan, Utah, and was raised in Salt Lake City. As a boy in grade school, he met and became lifelong friends with future LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley. As a young man, Durham served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the British", "id": "21588256" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nJonatana Napela or Jonathan Hawaii Napela (first name also spelled Iohatana, full name Napelakapuonamahanaonaleleonalani) (September 11, 1813 – August 6, 1879) was one of the earliest Hawaiian converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Hawaii, joining in the 1830s. He helped translate the Book of Mormon into the Hawaiian language, as \"Ka Buke a Moramona,\" working with missionary George Q. Cannon. Napela was appointed to serve as a superintendent of the colony at Kalaupapa, Molokai", "id": "16647246" }, { "contents": "Richfield, Utah\n\n\nserves about 600 students per year. As in most settled areas of rural Utah, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) plays a prominent role. The Mormons were highly industrious colonizers. From 1847, when they founded Salt Lake City, until 1877, they founded 360 towns. Following direction from Brigham Young, Latter-day Saints founded the town and outlying hamlets about 150 years ago. Members of the LDS Church are predominant among the residents. Even in this heart of Mormon country,", "id": "11082836" }, { "contents": "Marvin O. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Owen Ashton (April 8, 1883 – October 7, 1946) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1938 until his death. Prior to becoming a general authority, Ashton was a prominent local leader of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City, Utah. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Mormon parents. He married Rachel Grace Jeremy in 1906 and in 1907 went to England as a missionary for the LDS Church. He returned", "id": "14505232" }, { "contents": "LeGrand Richards\n\n\nLeGrand Richards (February 6, 1886 – January 11, 1983) was a prominent missionary and leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He served as the seventh presiding bishop of the LDS Church from 1938 to 1952, and was then called as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles by church president David O. McKay. Richards served in the Quorum of the Twelve until his death in Salt Lake City, Utah, at the age of 96. Richards was born in", "id": "2294374" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nwas educated at Lahainaluna School. Napela was trained as a lawyer. He was serving as a judge in Wailuku, Hawaii, when he met American George Q. Cannon, a member of the LDS Church on a missionary trip to Hawaii. After Napela's conversion in the 1830s to the LDS Church, the government forced the judge to resign from his position. The LDS Church was regarded with suspicion. LDS Church historian Andrew Jensen said that Napela \"did splendid missionary work for the Church.\" Napela was sent on a specific", "id": "16647248" }, { "contents": "Gardo House\n\n\ncounselor George Q. Cannon and other church leaders suggested that Taylor occupy the Gardo House after its completion, but he repeatedly refused. However, when church members unanimously voted on April 9, 1879, to make the Gardo House the official parsonage for LDS Church presidents, Taylor reluctantly accepted their decision. Moses Thatcher, William Jennings, and Angus M. Cannon were appointed as a committee to oversee completion of the mansion. On December 27, 1881, the Deseret News published a letter from John Taylor announcing a public reception and tour of", "id": "1496184" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nStates Mission of the church in 1901. In 1902, Grant married George J. Cannon. In 1923, Cannon was asked to succeed Mae Taylor Nystrom as the second counselor to Martha Horne Tingey, the general president of what was then called the Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Association. In 1929, when Ruth May Fox succeeded Tingey, Cannon was asked to be her first counselor. Cannon served in this capacity until 1929, when Fox was released and Cannon was selected by her father, who was President of the Church, to", "id": "1681854" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\n. (At the time, Cannon was a counselor to James E. Faust in the church's International Mission, which had jurisdiction over all areas of the world not otherwise part of a mission.) After Bateman and Cannon reported the results of their trip, Cannon and his wife were called and set apart as the first Mormon missionaries to black Africa. They—along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey—preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 35 branches and 5 districts of the LDS Church in Nigeria", "id": "9582826" }, { "contents": "Marion D. Hanks\n\n\nMarion Duff Hanks (October 13, 1921 – August 5, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1953 until his death. Hanks was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man he served in the Northern States Mission of the LDS Church, which was headquartered in Chicago. He was in the United States Navy during World War II and received a J.D. from the University of Utah. Prior to his call as a general authority", "id": "6558935" }, { "contents": "Lillie T. Freeze\n\n\nthe Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association (YLMIA). In this capacity, she was invited to speak at the Salt Lake Tabernacle on April 6, 1880, at a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the LDS Church's founding. In 1880, Lillie Freeze was one of the founding members of the LDS Church's Primary Association. Freeze was appointed as the first secretary of the general presidency, which was composed of Louie B. Felt, Matilda M. Barratt, and Clara C. M. Cannon. Freeze was secretary until 1888, when", "id": "10906695" }, { "contents": "Henry D. Taylor\n\n\nHenry Dixon Taylor (November 22, 1903 – February 24, 1987) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1958 until his death. Taylor was born in Provo, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Eastern States Mission. During his mission, Taylor was the president of the church's Connecticut District. Taylor received a bachelor's degree from Brigham Young University (BYU) and a master's degree", "id": "2477100" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas elected to be the non-voting delegate for Utah Territory in the United States Congress in 1872. He remained a congressional delegate until 1882, when his seat was declared vacant by the enactment of the Edmunds Act, which terminated many political and civil rights for Utah's Mormon polygamists. By 1880, Cannon had served four terms in Congress as Territorial Delegate. The newly appointed anti-Mormon territorial governor, Eli Houston Murray, openly supported the Liberal Party, which generally opposed church candidates. The 1880 territory-wide election", "id": "19825275" }, { "contents": "George F. Richards\n\n\nGeorge Franklin Richards (February 23, 1861 – August 8, 1950) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from April 9, 1906 until his death. He also served as Acting Presiding Patriarch of the LDS Church from 1937 to 1942 and President of the Quorum of the Twelve from May 25, 1945 until his death. Richards was born in Farmington, Utah Territory, the son of Franklin D. Richards and Nanny Longstroth. Richards", "id": "2194252" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\n1882, at the age of 23, Cannon assumed business control of the \"Juvenile Instructor\" and associated publications. He continued his management until his death. In October 1892, Cannon and his brother John Q. Cannon took control of the \"Deseret News\" publishing. He also became the editor and publisher of \"The Contributor\". On October 9, 1882, Cannon became a member of the First Seven Presidents of the Seventy of the church. On October 7, 1889, church president Wilford Woodruff named Cannon a member", "id": "9035316" }, { "contents": "Howard Cannon\n\n\nHis grandfather David Cannon, was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon, and a leading figure in the building of the St. George Temple, who was later the third president of that temple. His father Walter Cannon was one of David Cannon's 31 children. Howard's parents had married in 1909, his mother was Leah Sullivan. When Cannon was two years old his father left for England to served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for two years. Cannon went to Woodward School in", "id": "18060013" }, { "contents": "Mormon fiction\n\n\nMormons were generally non-fiction, including scripture, missionary tracts, and doctrinal literature. In 1844, Parley P. Pratt published what is commonly cited as the first work of LDS fiction, the didactic \"Dialogue between Joseph Smith and the Devil\". It was first published in the New York Herald. Early Mormon leaders like Brigham Young and George Q. Cannon condemned novels for wasting time, a rhetoric that persisted until the 1880s. Fiction among LDS Church members developed once the Mormons had settled in Utah and developed a degree of", "id": "453087" }, { "contents": "Marvin J. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Jeremy Ashton (May 6, 1915 – February 25, 1994) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1971 until his death. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was the son of Marvin O. Ashton, a local LDS leader, who later became a church general authority. The younger Ashton worked in the lumber business as a youth. He graduated from the University of Utah. He served a", "id": "19825413" }, { "contents": "Rudger Clawson\n\n\nRudger Judd Clawson (March 12, 1857 – June 21, 1943) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1898 until his death in 1943. He also served as President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1921 until his death and as a member of the First Presidency of the LDS Church for five days in 1901. Clawson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to Hiram Bradley Clawson and Margaret Judd", "id": "9035430" }, { "contents": "Utah-Idaho Sugar Company\n\n\npayment and a $130,000 loan. Cutler also went to Chicago and New York City to secure loans from banks; he came back, via train, with a bag full of money, as he did not think any banks in Utah could have cashed the large bank draft. The LDS church made more payments and secured more loans. In addition, George Q. Cannon and Heber J. Grant personally funded the enterprise. Joseph F. Smith, president of the LDS Church, gave a sermon in 1893 explaining that this was done to", "id": "1319991" }, { "contents": "President of the Church (LDS Church)\n\n\nthe President of the Quorum. When Woodruff died, his counselors returned to the Quorum based on the date they were ordained an apostle, placing George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith below Brigham Young Jr. and John Willard Young. Heber J. Grant objected to that arguing that seniority should be based on ordination to the Quorum rather than ordination as an apostle. Young argued that an apostle should not be demoted as long as he is worthy of the position. On March 31, 1900, Snow met with his counselors, Cannon and", "id": "16343191" }, { "contents": "Alfred W. McCune\n\n\n. Judge Orlando Powers, Associate Justice of the Utah Supreme Court, said in 1906 that he understood that McCune was not a Mormon. Frank J. Cannon, too, claimed McCune was not a Mormon, and B. H. Roberts, LDS Church historian and member of the First Council of the Seventy, said in 1930 that McCune was not a church member. Historian Orvin Malmquist, however, says that church records show he was baptized into the LDS Church at the age of eight in 1857, and that his marriage to Elizabeth", "id": "15062757" } ]
Joseph Jenne Cannon ( May 22 , 1877 -- November 5 , 1945 ) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in [START_ENT] The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints [END_ENT] ( LDS Church ) . He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family . As a young man , Cannon served as a for the LDS Church in Europe . He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903 . Lyman and Cannon also similarly dedicated Finland in 1903 . In the 1908 election , Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from . He served one term , from 1909 to 1911 . Cannon was not formally associated with any political party . From 1931 to 1934 , Cannon was the editor of the Deseret News , a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church . His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church 's British Mission . Cannon served in this capacity for three years , until 1937 . Immediately following his return to Utah , Cannon was asked to become the first assistant to George Q. Morris , the general superintendent of the church 's . Cannon served in this capacity until his death from pancreatic cancer
55cf45f9-a4f4-40d4-a2ba-02af9cb35360_Joseph_J._Canno:1
[{"answer": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "5935", "title": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nJoseph Jenne Cannon (May 22, 1877 – November 5, 1945) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Europe. He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in St. Petersburg and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903. Lyman and Cannon", "id": "13710370" }, { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nalso similarly dedicated Finland in 1903. In the 1908 election, Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. He served one term, from 1909 to 1911. Cannon was not formally associated with any political party. From 1931 to 1934, Cannon was the editor of the \"Deseret News\", a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church. His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church's British Mission. Cannon served in this", "id": "13710371" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nSylvester Quayle Cannon (June 10, 1877 – May 29, 1943) was an American businessman, engineer, and religious leader who served as the sixth presiding bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1925 to 1938 and a member of church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1939 until his death. He was the son of George Q. Cannon, an apostle and member of the church's First Presidency. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. He studied", "id": "2194372" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nJohn Quayle Cannon (April 19, 1857 – January 14, 1931) was an editor-in-chief of the \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, Utah, and a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He also served as a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army during the Spanish–American War. He was the son of LDS Church apostle George Q. Cannon and Elizabeth Hoagland. He was married to Elizabeth \"Annie\" Wells Cannon. Cannon", "id": "7202721" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nFrank Jenne Cannon (January 25, 1859July 25, 1933) was the first United States Senator from Utah, who served from 1896 to 1899. Born in Salt Lake City, he was the eldest child of Sarah Jenne Cannon and George Q. Cannon. His father was an Apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and later was a member of its First Presidency. After attending the school in Salt Lake City, he studied at University of Deseret, graduating at the age of 19", "id": "11000345" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nEdwin Quayle \"Ted\" Cannon, Jr. (May 6, 1918 – April 6, 2005) was a Utah politician and businessman and was a prominent leader and missionary in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was among the first missionaries in the LDS Church to preach to black people in Africa and was part of the first group missionaries sent to establish official congregations of the LDS Church in West Africa. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Edwin Q. Cannon,", "id": "9582822" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Ivins Cannon (March 9, 1920 – August 4, 2009) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1986 to 1991. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, Cannon was the son of George J. Cannon and Lucy Grant Cannon, a leader of the youth in the LDS Church. His maternal grandfather was Heber J. Grant, the seventh president of the LDS Church. His paternal grandfather was Abraham H. Cannon, who was a member of the church", "id": "8339578" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nLucy Grant Cannon (October 22, 1880 – May 7, 1966) was the fourth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1937 to 1948. She was a member of the general presidency of the Young Women from 1923 to 1948, serving as a counselor to two presidents. Lucy Grant was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Lucy Stringham and LDS Church apostle Heber J. Grant. She served as a church missionary in the Western", "id": "1681853" }, { "contents": "George Mousley Cannon\n\n\nTrust Company. He served as a delegate to the 1895 Utah State Constitutional Convention and chaired the committee which formulated the articles on taxation and public debt. In 1896, Cannon was elected to the Utah State Senate and served as its first president. When The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) modified stake boundaries in 1900, dividing the new Granite Stake off from the Salt Lake Stake, Cannon became the Sunday School Superintendent of the new stake. From 1901 until after 1930, Cannon served as", "id": "8629874" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nat the University of Utah and then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received a B.S. degree in mining engineering. In 1899, Cannon began an LDS Church mission in Belgium. Cannon then served from 1900 to 1902 as president of the church's Netherlands–Belgium Mission. Cannon also served as Francis M. Lyman's secretary on a three-month trip to many nations along the Mediterranean and in the Middle East. From 1916 to 1925, Cannon served as president of the Pioneer Stake in Salt Lake City. In", "id": "2194373" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\nAbraham Hoagland Cannon (also reported as Abram H. Cannon) (March 12, 1859 – July 19, 1896) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. His parents were George Q. Cannon, a Latter Day Saints apostle, and Elizabeth Hoagland, daughter of Abraham Hoagland. Cannon studied at Deseret University. Later, he studied architecture under Obed Taylor. Cannon married Sarah A.", "id": "9035314" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nSr. and Luella Wareing. He was born at his parents' home because of the 1918 influenza pandemic. Cannon's paternal grandfather was George Q. Cannon, a Mormon pioneer and prominent leader in the LDS Church. Cannon was raised in Salt Lake City. In 1937, Cannon went on a mission for the LDS Church to Nazi Germany. He was president of a branch of the church in Berlin in 1939 when the LDS Church evacuated its missionaries from Europe at the beginning of World War II. Cannon finished his mission in", "id": "9582823" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\n. Callville was submerged when Lake Mead was filled. In 1869 and 1870, Cannon served a second mission in the Eastern United States. In April 1876, Cannon became president of the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. He served in this position until April 1, 1904. After his time as stake president, Cannon served as a patriarch in the church. Cannon was the mayor of St. George, Utah Territory in 1861 and 1862. In 1896, after Utah had become a U.S. state, he stood for election", "id": "7202652" }, { "contents": "Donald Q. Cannon\n\n\nDonald Quayle Cannon (born 1936) is a retired professor at Brigham Young University who specializes in Mormon history, particularly early Mormon history and international Mormon history. As a young man, Cannon was a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Germany. Cannon earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Utah. Cannon holds a Ph.D. from Clark University. In the late 1960s, he taught at the University of Southern Maine. In the LDS Church he has", "id": "10057919" }, { "contents": "George Goddard (Mormon)\n\n\nwas the clerk to LDS Church presiding bishop Edward Hunter. From 1874 to 1884, Goddard was the clerk of the LDS Church's biannual general conferences. In 1872, Goddard became the inaugural first assistant to George Q. Cannon, the first superintendent of the Deseret Sunday School Union. Goddard served in this capacity for 26 years, until his death in 1899. Goddard was also a member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and a patriarch in the church. He died in Salt Lake City and was buried at Salt Lake City Cemetery.", "id": "7701639" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nuntil their arrival in Utah. In 1854, Cannon went on a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to the Eastern United States, where he assisted John Taylor in publishing a periodical entitled \"The Mormon\". He also preached and baptized in Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware. Cannon returned to Utah Territory due to the troubles connected with the Utah War. In 1864, Cannon helped establish Call's Landing on the Colorado River, later known as Callville, Nevada", "id": "7202651" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nJanath Russell Cannon (October 28, 1918 – July 5, 2007) was a counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was also a prominent missionary in the church and was among the first to preach to black people in Africa. Born in Ogden, Utah, Janath Russell was educated at Wellesley College. In 1941, she married Edwin Q. Cannon in the Salt Lake Temple. From 1971 to 1974,", "id": "9582964" }, { "contents": "Joseph A. Cannon\n\n\nserved as an assistant administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from 1983 to 1985. Joseph A. Cannon was born on July 31, 1949. Cannon served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Ireland, including on the Isle of Man, the ancestral homeland of the Cannons. Cannon received a degree in political science and, in 1977, a law degree from Brigham Young University. Cannon served as a law clerk in Salt Lake City for U.S. District", "id": "7202830" }, { "contents": "Elaine A. Cannon\n\n\nElaine Anderson Cannon (April 9, 1922 – May 19, 2003) was the eighth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 to 1984. Cannon has been a writer and an editor and is the author of over 50 books. Elaine Anderson was born to Aldon Joseph and Minnie Egan Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a teenager, she started writing a daily column aimed at teenagers for the \"Deseret News\". She", "id": "1682052" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nAdele Morris Cannon Howells (January 11, 1886 – April 14, 1951) was the fourth general president of the Primary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1943 until her death of rheumatic heart disease. She contributed to \"The Children's Friend\" magazine, as well as the fundraising for the Children's Primary Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. Adele Morris Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to George Mousley Cannon and Marian Adelaide Morris. She", "id": "1336419" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\nGeorgius Young Cannon (March 6, 1892 – March 29, 1987) was a 20th-century architect in the American West who operated principally out of Salt Lake City, Utah. Cannon trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), graduating in 1918. He then joined the army and later returned to Utah to intern with the architectural firm Ware & Treganza and Cannon & Fetzer. He served two missions to Germany for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). For a time", "id": "12786285" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Quayle Cannon (January 11, 1827 – April 12, 1901) was an early member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), and served in the First Presidency under four successive presidents of the church: Brigham Young, John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. He was the church's chief political strategist, and was dubbed \"the Mormon premier\" and \"the Mormon Richelieu\" by the press. He was also a five", "id": "19825263" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nwas the oldest of nine children, and her father George Cannon was the first president of the Utah State Senate. As a child, Cannon suffered from rheumatic fever. She enjoyed reading in her spare time and horseback riding. She was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Cannon attended schools in Salt Lake City and graduated from the LDS High School and Business College in 1903. She attended the University of Utah and studied physical education and graduated with her bachelor's degree in 1909. Cannon", "id": "1336420" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nis one of the few general authorities of the LDS Church to have been excommunicated. From 1889 until 1892, Cannon was the editor of the \"Ogden Standard\". From October 1892 until April 1898, he was the editor in chief of the \"Deseret News\". After the Spanish–American War he returned to work at the \"Deseret News\" and served as an executive editor of the newspaper off-and-on until his death. He was much beloved by his co-workers. Cannon was a member", "id": "7202722" }, { "contents": "Tracy Y. Cannon\n\n\nLatter-day Saints. In 1939, he was made second assistant to Melvin J. Ballard, supervisor of the committee. From 1915 to 1927, Cannon was a member of the high council of the Pioneer Stake of the LDS Church. In 1917, he became a member of the Deseret Sunday School Union General Board. From 1930 through 1936, Cannon was bishop of the Cannon Ward in Salt Lake City. Cannon was an editor of the 1927 LDS Church hymnal. In 1925, Cannon was appointed director of the McCune School", "id": "12019030" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe church's Welsh-language periodical, \"Udgorn Seion\". From 1867 to 1874, Cannon was the managing editor of the \"Deseret News\". It was under his direction that the newspaper was first published on a daily basis. In 1866, Cannon began publication of a magazine for youth and young adult Latter-day Saints called \"The Juvenile Instructor\". He owned and published this magazine until his death; in 1901 his family sold the magazine to the LDS Church's Sunday School organization. The periodical was", "id": "19825272" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nCannon and her husband were heads of the Switzerland Mission of the LDS Church. Upon their return to Utah in 1974, Cannon became the first counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the church's Relief Society. Cannon served in this capacity until 1978, when she was released so that she and her husband could become the first missionaries of the church to preach in \"black Africa\". They — along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey — preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 27", "id": "9582965" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\nan LDS Church organization responsible for educating young members of the LDS church, and the magazine was the first church periodical oriented toward youth. Cannon opened the George Q. Cannon & Sons bookstore in 1867 to sell the magazine and other publications of an uplifting nature. Cannon believed that secular novels did not reflect Latter-day Saint values. In the 1880s, Cannon expanded with a branch in Ogden, Utah. It is not known how many books Cannon & Sons actually published itself. In this era, authors commonly self-published", "id": "18344085" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n. Cannon was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. Cannon fathered 32 children, some of whom are Abraham H. Cannon, John Q. Cannon, and Sylvester Q. Cannon, who all became general authorities of the LDS Church; Frank J. Cannon, Utah's first U.S. Senator; and Lewis T. Cannon and Georgius Y. Cannon, prominent architects in Utah. Some of Cannon's prominent descendants include Howard Cannon, U.S. Senator from Nevada from 1959 to 1983 and Chris Cannon, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1997 to", "id": "19825281" }, { "contents": "Salt Lake City Council Hall\n\n\nwho was then the official architect for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Built at First South and 120 East (more on Salt Lake City's coordinate system), sandstone for the structure was delivered from Red Butte Canyon on Utah's first chartered railroad. The well-furnished Greek revival building was completed at a cost of $70,000. In January 1866, City Hall was dedicated by George Q. Cannon, a prominent LDS leader. Many other LDS leaders attended the dedication including Brigham", "id": "19382830" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\n, Cannon moved to Los Angeles and worked as the office manager of his MIT schoolmate Wallace Neff. He later returned to Utah and designed numerous buildings, mostly residences, and some of which remain on the National Register of Historic Places. Among his works were meetinghouses of the LDS Church and other civic buildings. Cannon served on a church-appointed board of six architects that oversaw the construction of the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple. Cannon was the youngest of 32 children born to LDS Church leader George Q. Cannon. His mother,", "id": "12786286" }, { "contents": "Karl G. Maeser\n\n\nin the General Superintendency of the Deseret Sunday School Union. He was the Second Assistant to General Superintendent George Q. Cannon from July 1894 to January 1899. He then served as the First Assistant to Cannon from January 1899 until February 1901. Maeser also participated in the Utah constitutional convention after Abraham Smoot's death in 1895. He proposed an article to support prohibition, but later backed down. Missionaries from the LDS Church were removed from California in 1858 due to the Utah War. Missionary work resumed in 1892. Maeser presided over", "id": "11030473" }, { "contents": "Frank B. Woodbury\n\n\nFrank Bartlett Woodbury (December 27, 1867 – December 21, 1962) was a leader of and an Acting Presiding Patriarch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), one of only three church members to hold this position in church history. Born in St. George, Utah Territory, to Orin Nelson Woodbury and Ann Cannon, Woodbury served in many capacities in the church on a local level. Some, but not all, LDS Church sources list Woodbury as \"Acting Presiding Patriarch\" of", "id": "8238754" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand 1958 and served three full terms. From 1964 to 1971, Cannon was a bishop of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. From 1971 to 1974, he was the president of the Switzerland Mission of the church. In 1978, three weeks after the LDS Church announced that it would no longer impose restrictions of black people receiving the priesthood or participating in temple ordinances, Cannon traveled to Africa on behalf of the church with Merrill J. Bateman to assess the prospects for church missionary work and growth in \"black Africa\"", "id": "9582825" }, { "contents": "Amasa Lyman\n\n\n). Lyman served as the first mayor of San Bernardino. In 1860, Young appointed three of the twelve apostles—Lyman, Charles C. Rich, and George Q. Cannon—to the presidency of the church's European Mission. On March 16, 1862, Lyman preached a sermon in Dundee, Scotland, which all but denied the reality of and the necessity for the atonement of Jesus Christ, which is a central tenet of the LDS Church. His speech appeared to have been overlooked for years, but on January 21", "id": "12068047" }, { "contents": "Mark E. Petersen\n\n\nMark Edward Petersen (November 7, 1900 – January 11, 1984) was an American news editor and religious leader who served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1944 until his death. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, he filled the vacancy in the Quorum caused by the excommunication of Richard R. Lyman. Petersen had become managing editor of the church-owned \"Deseret News\" in 1935 and editor in 1941.", "id": "2692480" }, { "contents": "Thomas C. Griggs\n\n\nthe LDS Church's Aaronic priesthood; his call to this office was given by Apostle George Q. Cannon. With the outbreak of the American Civil War, the Griggs heeded the counsel of LDS Church leaders to move to Utah Territory. The Griggs crossed the plains in Joseph Horne's Mormon pioneer company in 1861. Griggs first joined the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in 1866 when Charles John Thomas was the director. Griggs would continue as a member of the choir until his death in 1903. While Robert Sands was the conductor of the choir", "id": "9481149" }, { "contents": "Charles Clarence Neslen\n\n\nfrom Germany and he was imprisoned in Danzig. He served as president of the Königsberg District of the LDS Church for a part of his mission. Neslen was a member of the Democratic Party and a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1912. Neslen worked a total of 15 years for the \"Deseret News\". He was also a realtor and for a time served as secretary of the Salt Lake Real Estate Association. On October 26, 1905, Neslen married Grace T. Cannon, a daughter of George Q. Cannon.", "id": "21092533" }, { "contents": "Stephen L. Chipman\n\n\nStephen L. Chipman (1864–1945) was a member of the Utah State Legislature in 1903 and a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Utah County. He was also the first president of the Salt Lake Temple who was not also an apostle in the LDS Church. Chipman studied at Brigham Young Academy (the predecessor of Brigham Young University (BYU)) as a youth. From 1885 to 1887 he served as a Mormon missionary in the Southern States Mission of the LDS Church", "id": "15228384" }, { "contents": "Mountain Meadows massacre and Mormon public relations\n\n\nCannon, then president of the LDS California Mission. In the October 13, 1857 edition of Cannon's San Francisco newspaper \"The Western Standard\", Cannon responded to initial news reports of involvement by Mormons by charging the responsible journalists with writing \"reckless and malignant slanders\", despite knowing that the southern Utah Mormons were \"as innocent of [the massacre] as the child unborn\". The church's official newspaper in Salt Lake City, \"The Deseret News\", was initially slow to comment on the massacre,", "id": "22212632" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas the second-most senior apostle of the church after the death of Woodruff, Cannon did not become President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, as would be the practice in the LDS Church today. Rather, because Cannon was a member of the First Presidency, the church simply appointed the next senior apostle of the church—Brigham Young, Jr.—to be the quorum president. (Under today's practices, Cannon would have been appointed the president of the quorum and Young would have been appointed acting president.) Cannon", "id": "19825274" }, { "contents": "Clifford E. Young\n\n\nClifford Earle Young (December 7, 1883 – August 21, 1958) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1941 until his death. Young was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, the son of LDS Church leader Seymour B. Young. From 1905 to 1908, he served as a Mormon missionary in England and Germany. In 1928, Young became the president of the Alpine Stake of the LDS Church in Utah. In 1934, he joined the", "id": "8315768" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n33. Upon his joining the Quorum of the Twelve, Cannon was called to preside over the church's European Mission. Cannon's mission in Europe ended when he was recalled by Young in 1862 to work in Washington, D.C., to assist in the church's promotion of Utah Territory's bid for statehood. At the adjournment of the 1862 congressional session, Cannon again left for Europe to preside over the mission. In this capacity, Cannon was the editor of the \"Millennial Star\" and, for a short time,", "id": "19825271" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nfrom the federal authorities. In September 1888, Cannon surrendered himself and pleaded guilty at trial to charges of unlawful cohabitation under the Edmunds Act. As a result, Cannon served nearly six months in Utah's federal penitentiary. Cannon was pardoned in 1894 by U.S. President Grover Cleveland. Cannon died on April 12, 1901, in Monterey, California, at 74 years of age. Had he lived a few months longer, he would have become the President of the LDS Church: Lorenzo Snow died on October 10 of that year", "id": "19825280" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Isle of Man\n\n\nand Idaho which descends from the 19th century marriage of George Cannon and Ann Quayle before their emigration from Peel, Isle of Man. The family's most notable member was their oldest son George Quayle Cannon. The family is connected by marriage to the Bennion, Taylor, Wells and Young political families. LDS Membership statistics as of January 1, 2011 for the Isle of Man. The nation of the Isle of Man does not have its own mission. Instead it is served by an English mission. Five out of the six", "id": "7797107" }, { "contents": "The Contributor (LDS magazine)\n\n\nThe Contributor was an independent publication associated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) between 1879 and 1896. It was a monthly periodical and sought to represent the Young Men's and Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Associations (YMMIA and YLMIA respectively), the youth organizations of the LDS Church at the time. It was founded by Junius F. Wells, the inaugural head of the YMMIA. Abraham H. Cannon became editor when the magazine was purchased by the Cannon Publishing Company in 1892. With the", "id": "505110" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe official organ of the Sunday School until 1930, when it was replaced with \"The Instructor\". Cannon also served as the first general superintendent of the church's Sunday School from 1867 until his death. On April 8, 1873, Cannon became a member of the church's First Presidency when he was called as the first counselor by Brigham Young. Cannon went on to serve as counselor to three more presidents of the church: he was First Counselor to John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. Although Cannon", "id": "19825273" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\ntogether. Prior to her service in the general Primary presidency, Clara Cannon was a counselor in the presidencies of the Primary and Relief Society in the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. When Louie B. Felt became the first general presidency of the Primary, Matilda M. Barratt and Cannon were selected as Felt's counselors. Cannon was a counselor until 1895; the next year she was succeeded in the position by Josephine R. West. Clara Moses Cannon died of throat cancer in Centerville, Utah, aged 87 and was interred in", "id": "10663424" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nScouts of America and served in the organization's Great Salt Lake Council. Prior to his call as a general authority, Cannon served in the church as a bishop, stake president, patriarch, temple sealer, and regional representative. He was also the president of the church's Central British Mission from 1966 to 1969. From 1969 to 1972, Cannon was an assistant and counselor to W. Jay Eldredge, the general superintendent of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association. Cannon became a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy", "id": "8339580" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe Nauvoo Legion. During this time, Cannon served as printer of the \"Deseret News\" while it was publishing in exile in Fillmore, Utah. After the Utah War, he was called as president of the church's Eastern States Mission. The murder of Parley P. Pratt in 1857 created a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. That vacancy was not filled until Brigham Young called Cannon to the apostleship three years later. Cannon was ordained to the priesthood office of apostle on August 26, 1860, at age", "id": "19825270" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nin the Sandwich Islands (later known as the Kingdom of Hawaii), where he served for four years. While in the islands, Cannon converted many Native Hawaiians. One of the most notable was Jonatana Napela, who assisted Cannon in translating the Book of Mormon into Hawaiian. Joseph F. Smith, a future church president, would follow Cannon and serve in Hawaii one year later. Returning to Utah Territory, Cannon married Elizabeth Hoagland (daughter of Abraham Hoagland and his wife.) He was almost immediately called to assist apostle", "id": "19825268" }, { "contents": "Ronald E. Poelman\n\n\nRonald Eugene Poelman (May 10, 1928 – November 19, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 until his death. In 1984, he delivered a controversial sermon in the LDS Church's general conference which the church redacted before publishing. Poelman was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to a Latter-day Saint family. As a young man, he served as a Mormon missionary in the LDS Church's Netherlands Mission. He began his", "id": "4765396" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\n. He would marry Martha Brown of Ogden in 1878. In 1891 he helped to organize the Utah Republican Party. After a failed bid to become delegate from the Utah Territory, he succeeded and served from March 4, 1895, to January 4, 1896. Cannon was chosen in 1896 to serve as senator by the Utah Legislature in spite of LDS church leadership favoring his father for the job. He served in the United States Senate, initially, as a member of the Republican Party; however, he later became a", "id": "11000346" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nmember of the Silver Republican Party, founded by his successor (and future employer at \"The Salt Lake Tribune\") Thomas Kearns. Cannon lost re-election in 1899. Utah's state legislators indicated they would not support Cannon for re-election shortly after the November 1898 elections. Cannon had voted against the Dingley Act, which would have raised tariffs on sugar and helped the Utah sugar industry. It was strongly supported by the LDS Church hierarchy, who now opposed his re-election. Other factors were his support", "id": "11000347" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand Ghana. The first convert baptized in Africa was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and his wife were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' centre in Nauvoo, Illinois. For three months in 1989, Cannon was the interim president of the LDS Church's Germany Hamburg Mission; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. After his interim service as mission president, Cannon was the second president of the Frankfurt Germany Temple from 1989 to", "id": "9582827" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nCounselor to William B. Preston, the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church; he served in this position between 1884 and 1886. In 1884, shortly after Cannon had become a general authority, a sensationalized news story by Joseph Lippman in the \"Salt Lake Tribune\" alleged that Cannon had taken his wife's sister Louie Wells as a plural wife. Lippman suggested that Cannon and Wells had been married in the Logan Temple. In fact, there had been no such marriage, though it was later revealed that Cannon and Wells had", "id": "7202724" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nbranches of the LDS Church in Nigeria and Ghana. The first convert baptized in Nigeria was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and her husband were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' center in Nauvoo, Illinois. In 1989, they served as interim leaders of the Germany Hamburg Mission of the church; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. From 1989 to 1992, Cannon was the matron of the Frankfurt Germany Temple while her husband", "id": "9582966" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\n's Quorum of the Twelve. Abraham was a son of George Q. Cannon, an early member of the church's First Presidency. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary in the church's Central States Mission. After his mission, he served in the United States Air Force during the Second World War. In 1946, he began attending Brigham Young University (BYU). After graduating from BYU, Cannon became a vice president of Beneficial Life Insurance Company in Salt Lake City. He was active in the Boy", "id": "8339579" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\n1925, Cannon became the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church, succeeding Charles W. Nibley. Cannon's counselors were David A. Smith and John Wells. In 1938, Cannon was released as Presiding Bishop and was succeeded by LeGrand Richards. At the same time, Cannon was ordained an apostle and made an \"associate\" of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, a unique position that had never been filled before. When Quorum member Melvin J. Ballard died the next year, Cannon became a full member of the Quorum; he served", "id": "2194374" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\nClarissa Cordelia (\"Clara\") Moses Cannon (April 21, 1839 – August 21, 1926) was a Mormon pioneer and a member of the first-ever general presidency of the Primary organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). She was the second counselor to general president Louie B. Felt from 1880 to 1895. Clara Moses was born in Westfield, Massachusetts. In 1846 she took the six-month journey on the ship \"Brooklyn\" from New York City to San", "id": "10663422" }, { "contents": "Leonora Cannon Taylor\n\n\nLeonora Cannon Taylor (October 6, 1796–December 9, 1868) was a member of the Relief Society organization at the time of its origin and the first wife of John Taylor, the third president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). On October 6, 1796 in Peel, Isle of Man, Leonora Cannon was born to George Cannon and Leonora Callister. As the oldest daughter in the family, when Leonora's father died when she was thirteen she went away to London to work", "id": "16190675" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\ntheir books, which were then distributed by others. However, Cannon & Sons distributed several important books through their stores and mail order (see table). The company had extensive ties to the LDS Church-owned newspaper, the \"Deseret News.\" Five of Cannon's sons held important positions in the paper, and Cannon himself was editor between 1867 and 1872, and again while temporarily owning the paper from 1892 to 1898. Nearly every George Q. Cannon & Sons book was printed on the \"Deseret News\" press", "id": "18344086" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nof the Utah Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Cannon was the oldest son of George Q. Cannon and the one most expected to follow in his prominent father's footsteps in politics, church office, and journalism. Heber J. Grant once said of Cannon: \"There probably is not a young man in the church who had had more opportunities and advantages extended to him educationally, spiritually, and every other way than John Q. Cannon.\" At the age of 27, Cannon was called to serve as the Second", "id": "7202723" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nMartha Maria \"Mattie\" Hughes Cannon (July 1, 1857 – July 10, 1932) was a Welsh-born immigrant to the United States, a polygamous wife, physician, Utah women's rights advocate and suffragist, and Utah State Senator. Her family immigrated to the United States as converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and traveled West to settle in Utah territory with other Mormons. She started working at the age of fourteen. At sixteen she enrolled in the University", "id": "15993465" }, { "contents": "Church Office Building\n\n\nThe Church Office Building is a 28-story building in Salt Lake City, Utah, which houses the administrative support staff for the lay ministry of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) throughout the world. The building is 420 ft (128 m) tall at roof level and is located within the Temple Square complex on the corner of North Temple and State Street. The building was designed by George Cannon Young at a cost of US$31 million to build. Construction took place from 1962 to 1972", "id": "13754819" }, { "contents": "John Lyman Smith\n\n\nJohn Lyman Smith (November 17, 1828 – February 21, 1898) was an American politician and Mormon missionary. He served as a member of the Utah Territory's Legislative Assembly's House of Representatives for Iron County, Utah, from 1852 to 1853, and the Great Salt Lake County, Utah, from 1853 to 1855. Cousin of the founder of the Latter Day Saint Movement, Joseph Smith, Smith was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) who traveled to the", "id": "18219861" }, { "contents": "Francis M. Lyman\n\n\nFrancis Marion Lyman (January 12, 1840 – November 18, 1916) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was the President of the Quorum from 1903 until his death. Lyman's father and son were also apostles in the church: his father was Amasa M. Lyman and his son was Richard R. Lyman. Both his father and son were excommunicated from the church while serving as apostles. Francis M. Lyman was born as", "id": "20761093" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nAngus Munn Cannon (May 17, 1834 – June 7, 1915) was an early Latter Day Saint leader and Mormon pioneer. Cannon was born in Liverpool, Lancashire, England. His Manx parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 1840, being baptized by his uncle John Taylor. In 1842, the Cannon family went to Nauvoo, Illinois, United States. By 1849, they were in Utah Territory. Cannon was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon and their lives followed very similar paths up", "id": "7202650" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\naffairs while Taylor recovered. This training would serve him well in later life. Cannon's father died in 1845. In 1846, Taylor traveled to England to organize the affairs of the church after Smith's death. Meanwhile, Cannon accompanied Taylor's wife and family as they moved to Winter Quarters, Nebraska. When Taylor returned, Cannon traveled with the entire Taylor family to the Salt Lake Valley, arriving in October 1847. In 1849, Cannon was asked by church president Brigham Young to serve as a missionary for the church", "id": "19825267" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nstaying in the position until December 31, 1903. Cannon attempted to prohibit children not vaccinated from attending school in case of a disease outbreak. The Board of Health sent out vaccines; however, the \"Deseret News\" spread information that vaccines weren't safe. LDS Church leaders were divided on the subject. One apostle, Brigham Young Jr. was very vocal in his opinions, writing in the \"Deseret News\" about the evils of vaccinations. The influence of the \"Deseret News\" and Mormon religious leaders limited how many", "id": "15993490" }, { "contents": "Billy Johnson (Mormon)\n\n\nLDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball announced Official Declaration 2 which extended the priesthood to all worthy male members of the church regardless of race or color. In gratitude, Johnson sent a letter to Kimball, explaining that God had prepared the people in Ghana, asking him to send missionaries to the members. Kimball responded to his pleas and sent the first called missionaries Rendell N. Mabey and Rachel Mabey. They joined Edwin Q. Cannon and Janath R. Cannon. Johnson was finally baptized into the LDS Church on December 9, 1978. He", "id": "4108521" }, { "contents": "Juvenile Instructor\n\n\ncatechisms on the Bible, Book of Mormon, and Doctrine and Covenants; musical compositions; illustrations; stories; editorial teachings; and other aids to gospel instruction. It was the first magazine for children published in the United States west of the Mississippi River. For much of its history, \"The Juvenile Instructor\" was owned by the Cannon family. Its first editor was George Q. Cannon, an apostle in the LDS Church. Cannon and his family continued to publish the magazine privately until January 1, 1901, when the", "id": "9210614" }, { "contents": "Joseph F. Smith\n\n\nand as second counselor to Lorenzo Snow (1898–1901). Smith was appointed first counselor to Snow on the death of first counselor George Q. Cannon, but, as Snow himself died only four days later, Smith never served in that position. He succeeded Snow as president of the LDS Church and president of the Salt Lake Temple. He served as president of the temple until 1911, when he transferred the responsibility to Anthon H. Lund. Smith also served as editor of the \"Improvement Era\" and \"Juvenile Instructor\",", "id": "4117444" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in California\n\n\nQ. Cannon began publication in San Francisco of the \"Western Standard\", a weekly periodical supportive of the Church. The first colonization from Utah to California came in 1851 when a company of about 450 saints and slaves under direction of Elders Amasa M. Lyman and Charles C. Rich of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles settled at what is now San Bernardino. The colony was the final settlement in a string of Mormon communities extending from Salt Lake City in an area known as Deseret. The community thrived, and on July 6,", "id": "22187256" }, { "contents": "Sunday School (LDS Church)\n\n\nout. On November 11, 1867, Young and church leaders Daniel H. Wells, George A. Smith, Wilford Woodruff, George Q. Cannon, and Brigham Young, Jr. met and organized the Parent Sunday School Union. Young appointed Cannon as the first general superintendent of the Sunday School, a position he would hold until his death in 1901. In 1872, the Sunday School organization was renamed the Deseret Sunday School Union. The organized Sunday School addressed lesson topics and source materials, grading, prizes and rewards, use of hymns", "id": "8671425" }, { "contents": "Hugh W. Pinnock\n\n\nHugh Wallace Pinnock (January 15, 1934 – December 16, 2000) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Pinnock was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Western States Mission. Pinnock graduated from University of Utah in 1958, where he became a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity and Owl and Key. Prior to his call to the First", "id": "8519001" }, { "contents": "Charles W. Penrose\n\n\nwas organized Penrose was called as a member of the high council. In 1877, Penrose became the assistant editor of the LDS Church-owned \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, working under George Q. Cannon. Penrose was known for his writing, including missionary tracts and lyrics of Latter-day Saint hymns, including \"God of Our Fathers\", \"O Ye Mountains High\", and \"Up, Awake, Ye Defenders of Zion\". In 1880, Penrose became the editor-in-chief of", "id": "2194239" }, { "contents": "Rulon S. Wells\n\n\nRulon Seymour Wells (July 7, 1854 – May 7, 1941) was a Utah politician and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1893 until his death. Wells was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to LDS Church leader Daniel H. Wells (1814–1891) and Louisa Free (1824–1886). In 1875, Wells travelled to Europe as a Mormon missionary and worked primarily in Germany and Switzerland. He returned to the United States in 1877. On", "id": "8315459" }, { "contents": "G. Homer Durham\n\n\nGeorge Homer Durham (February 4, 1911 – January 10, 1985) was an American academic administrator and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Durham was born in Parowan, Utah, and was raised in Salt Lake City. As a boy in grade school, he met and became lifelong friends with future LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley. As a young man, Durham served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the British", "id": "21588256" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nJonatana Napela or Jonathan Hawaii Napela (first name also spelled Iohatana, full name Napelakapuonamahanaonaleleonalani) (September 11, 1813 – August 6, 1879) was one of the earliest Hawaiian converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Hawaii, joining in the 1830s. He helped translate the Book of Mormon into the Hawaiian language, as \"Ka Buke a Moramona,\" working with missionary George Q. Cannon. Napela was appointed to serve as a superintendent of the colony at Kalaupapa, Molokai", "id": "16647246" }, { "contents": "Richfield, Utah\n\n\nserves about 600 students per year. As in most settled areas of rural Utah, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) plays a prominent role. The Mormons were highly industrious colonizers. From 1847, when they founded Salt Lake City, until 1877, they founded 360 towns. Following direction from Brigham Young, Latter-day Saints founded the town and outlying hamlets about 150 years ago. Members of the LDS Church are predominant among the residents. Even in this heart of Mormon country,", "id": "11082836" }, { "contents": "Marvin O. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Owen Ashton (April 8, 1883 – October 7, 1946) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1938 until his death. Prior to becoming a general authority, Ashton was a prominent local leader of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City, Utah. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Mormon parents. He married Rachel Grace Jeremy in 1906 and in 1907 went to England as a missionary for the LDS Church. He returned", "id": "14505232" }, { "contents": "LeGrand Richards\n\n\nLeGrand Richards (February 6, 1886 – January 11, 1983) was a prominent missionary and leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He served as the seventh presiding bishop of the LDS Church from 1938 to 1952, and was then called as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles by church president David O. McKay. Richards served in the Quorum of the Twelve until his death in Salt Lake City, Utah, at the age of 96. Richards was born in", "id": "2294374" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nwas educated at Lahainaluna School. Napela was trained as a lawyer. He was serving as a judge in Wailuku, Hawaii, when he met American George Q. Cannon, a member of the LDS Church on a missionary trip to Hawaii. After Napela's conversion in the 1830s to the LDS Church, the government forced the judge to resign from his position. The LDS Church was regarded with suspicion. LDS Church historian Andrew Jensen said that Napela \"did splendid missionary work for the Church.\" Napela was sent on a specific", "id": "16647248" }, { "contents": "Gardo House\n\n\ncounselor George Q. Cannon and other church leaders suggested that Taylor occupy the Gardo House after its completion, but he repeatedly refused. However, when church members unanimously voted on April 9, 1879, to make the Gardo House the official parsonage for LDS Church presidents, Taylor reluctantly accepted their decision. Moses Thatcher, William Jennings, and Angus M. Cannon were appointed as a committee to oversee completion of the mansion. On December 27, 1881, the Deseret News published a letter from John Taylor announcing a public reception and tour of", "id": "1496184" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nStates Mission of the church in 1901. In 1902, Grant married George J. Cannon. In 1923, Cannon was asked to succeed Mae Taylor Nystrom as the second counselor to Martha Horne Tingey, the general president of what was then called the Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Association. In 1929, when Ruth May Fox succeeded Tingey, Cannon was asked to be her first counselor. Cannon served in this capacity until 1929, when Fox was released and Cannon was selected by her father, who was President of the Church, to", "id": "1681854" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\n. (At the time, Cannon was a counselor to James E. Faust in the church's International Mission, which had jurisdiction over all areas of the world not otherwise part of a mission.) After Bateman and Cannon reported the results of their trip, Cannon and his wife were called and set apart as the first Mormon missionaries to black Africa. They—along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey—preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 35 branches and 5 districts of the LDS Church in Nigeria", "id": "9582826" }, { "contents": "Marion D. Hanks\n\n\nMarion Duff Hanks (October 13, 1921 – August 5, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1953 until his death. Hanks was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man he served in the Northern States Mission of the LDS Church, which was headquartered in Chicago. He was in the United States Navy during World War II and received a J.D. from the University of Utah. Prior to his call as a general authority", "id": "6558935" }, { "contents": "Lillie T. Freeze\n\n\nthe Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association (YLMIA). In this capacity, she was invited to speak at the Salt Lake Tabernacle on April 6, 1880, at a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the LDS Church's founding. In 1880, Lillie Freeze was one of the founding members of the LDS Church's Primary Association. Freeze was appointed as the first secretary of the general presidency, which was composed of Louie B. Felt, Matilda M. Barratt, and Clara C. M. Cannon. Freeze was secretary until 1888, when", "id": "10906695" }, { "contents": "Henry D. Taylor\n\n\nHenry Dixon Taylor (November 22, 1903 – February 24, 1987) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1958 until his death. Taylor was born in Provo, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Eastern States Mission. During his mission, Taylor was the president of the church's Connecticut District. Taylor received a bachelor's degree from Brigham Young University (BYU) and a master's degree", "id": "2477100" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas elected to be the non-voting delegate for Utah Territory in the United States Congress in 1872. He remained a congressional delegate until 1882, when his seat was declared vacant by the enactment of the Edmunds Act, which terminated many political and civil rights for Utah's Mormon polygamists. By 1880, Cannon had served four terms in Congress as Territorial Delegate. The newly appointed anti-Mormon territorial governor, Eli Houston Murray, openly supported the Liberal Party, which generally opposed church candidates. The 1880 territory-wide election", "id": "19825275" }, { "contents": "George F. Richards\n\n\nGeorge Franklin Richards (February 23, 1861 – August 8, 1950) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from April 9, 1906 until his death. He also served as Acting Presiding Patriarch of the LDS Church from 1937 to 1942 and President of the Quorum of the Twelve from May 25, 1945 until his death. Richards was born in Farmington, Utah Territory, the son of Franklin D. Richards and Nanny Longstroth. Richards", "id": "2194252" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\n1882, at the age of 23, Cannon assumed business control of the \"Juvenile Instructor\" and associated publications. He continued his management until his death. In October 1892, Cannon and his brother John Q. Cannon took control of the \"Deseret News\" publishing. He also became the editor and publisher of \"The Contributor\". On October 9, 1882, Cannon became a member of the First Seven Presidents of the Seventy of the church. On October 7, 1889, church president Wilford Woodruff named Cannon a member", "id": "9035316" }, { "contents": "Howard Cannon\n\n\nHis grandfather David Cannon, was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon, and a leading figure in the building of the St. George Temple, who was later the third president of that temple. His father Walter Cannon was one of David Cannon's 31 children. Howard's parents had married in 1909, his mother was Leah Sullivan. When Cannon was two years old his father left for England to served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for two years. Cannon went to Woodward School in", "id": "18060013" }, { "contents": "Mormon fiction\n\n\nMormons were generally non-fiction, including scripture, missionary tracts, and doctrinal literature. In 1844, Parley P. Pratt published what is commonly cited as the first work of LDS fiction, the didactic \"Dialogue between Joseph Smith and the Devil\". It was first published in the New York Herald. Early Mormon leaders like Brigham Young and George Q. Cannon condemned novels for wasting time, a rhetoric that persisted until the 1880s. Fiction among LDS Church members developed once the Mormons had settled in Utah and developed a degree of", "id": "453087" }, { "contents": "Marvin J. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Jeremy Ashton (May 6, 1915 – February 25, 1994) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1971 until his death. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was the son of Marvin O. Ashton, a local LDS leader, who later became a church general authority. The younger Ashton worked in the lumber business as a youth. He graduated from the University of Utah. He served a", "id": "19825413" }, { "contents": "Rudger Clawson\n\n\nRudger Judd Clawson (March 12, 1857 – June 21, 1943) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1898 until his death in 1943. He also served as President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1921 until his death and as a member of the First Presidency of the LDS Church for five days in 1901. Clawson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to Hiram Bradley Clawson and Margaret Judd", "id": "9035430" }, { "contents": "Utah-Idaho Sugar Company\n\n\npayment and a $130,000 loan. Cutler also went to Chicago and New York City to secure loans from banks; he came back, via train, with a bag full of money, as he did not think any banks in Utah could have cashed the large bank draft. The LDS church made more payments and secured more loans. In addition, George Q. Cannon and Heber J. Grant personally funded the enterprise. Joseph F. Smith, president of the LDS Church, gave a sermon in 1893 explaining that this was done to", "id": "1319991" }, { "contents": "President of the Church (LDS Church)\n\n\nthe President of the Quorum. When Woodruff died, his counselors returned to the Quorum based on the date they were ordained an apostle, placing George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith below Brigham Young Jr. and John Willard Young. Heber J. Grant objected to that arguing that seniority should be based on ordination to the Quorum rather than ordination as an apostle. Young argued that an apostle should not be demoted as long as he is worthy of the position. On March 31, 1900, Snow met with his counselors, Cannon and", "id": "16343191" }, { "contents": "Alfred W. McCune\n\n\n. Judge Orlando Powers, Associate Justice of the Utah Supreme Court, said in 1906 that he understood that McCune was not a Mormon. Frank J. Cannon, too, claimed McCune was not a Mormon, and B. H. Roberts, LDS Church historian and member of the First Council of the Seventy, said in 1930 that McCune was not a church member. Historian Orvin Malmquist, however, says that church records show he was baptized into the LDS Church at the age of eight in 1857, and that his marriage to Elizabeth", "id": "15062757" } ]
Joseph Jenne Cannon ( May 22 , 1877 -- November 5 , 1945 ) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ( LDS Church ) . He was a member of the prominent [START_ENT] Cannon political family [END_ENT] . As a young man , Cannon served as a for the LDS Church in Europe . He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903 . Lyman and Cannon also similarly dedicated Finland in 1903 . In the 1908 election , Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from . He served one term , from 1909 to 1911 . Cannon was not formally associated with any political party . From 1931 to 1934 , Cannon was the editor of the Deseret News , a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church . His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church 's British Mission . Cannon served in this capacity for three years , until 1937 . Immediately following his return to Utah , Cannon was asked to become the first assistant to George Q. Morris , the general superintendent of the church 's . Cannon served in this capacity until his death from pancreatic cancer
3351601e-d32f-4ec3-af1f-5769a8870812_Joseph_J._Canno:2
[{"answer": "Cannon family", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "3024243", "title": "Cannon family"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nJoseph Jenne Cannon (May 22, 1877 – November 5, 1945) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Europe. He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in St. Petersburg and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903. Lyman and Cannon", "id": "13710370" }, { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nalso similarly dedicated Finland in 1903. In the 1908 election, Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. He served one term, from 1909 to 1911. Cannon was not formally associated with any political party. From 1931 to 1934, Cannon was the editor of the \"Deseret News\", a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church. His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church's British Mission. Cannon served in this", "id": "13710371" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nSylvester Quayle Cannon (June 10, 1877 – May 29, 1943) was an American businessman, engineer, and religious leader who served as the sixth presiding bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1925 to 1938 and a member of church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1939 until his death. He was the son of George Q. Cannon, an apostle and member of the church's First Presidency. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. He studied", "id": "2194372" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nJohn Quayle Cannon (April 19, 1857 – January 14, 1931) was an editor-in-chief of the \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, Utah, and a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He also served as a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army during the Spanish–American War. He was the son of LDS Church apostle George Q. Cannon and Elizabeth Hoagland. He was married to Elizabeth \"Annie\" Wells Cannon. Cannon", "id": "7202721" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nFrank Jenne Cannon (January 25, 1859July 25, 1933) was the first United States Senator from Utah, who served from 1896 to 1899. Born in Salt Lake City, he was the eldest child of Sarah Jenne Cannon and George Q. Cannon. His father was an Apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and later was a member of its First Presidency. After attending the school in Salt Lake City, he studied at University of Deseret, graduating at the age of 19", "id": "11000345" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nEdwin Quayle \"Ted\" Cannon, Jr. (May 6, 1918 – April 6, 2005) was a Utah politician and businessman and was a prominent leader and missionary in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was among the first missionaries in the LDS Church to preach to black people in Africa and was part of the first group missionaries sent to establish official congregations of the LDS Church in West Africa. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Edwin Q. Cannon,", "id": "9582822" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Ivins Cannon (March 9, 1920 – August 4, 2009) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1986 to 1991. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, Cannon was the son of George J. Cannon and Lucy Grant Cannon, a leader of the youth in the LDS Church. His maternal grandfather was Heber J. Grant, the seventh president of the LDS Church. His paternal grandfather was Abraham H. Cannon, who was a member of the church", "id": "8339578" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nLucy Grant Cannon (October 22, 1880 – May 7, 1966) was the fourth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1937 to 1948. She was a member of the general presidency of the Young Women from 1923 to 1948, serving as a counselor to two presidents. Lucy Grant was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Lucy Stringham and LDS Church apostle Heber J. Grant. She served as a church missionary in the Western", "id": "1681853" }, { "contents": "George Mousley Cannon\n\n\nTrust Company. He served as a delegate to the 1895 Utah State Constitutional Convention and chaired the committee which formulated the articles on taxation and public debt. In 1896, Cannon was elected to the Utah State Senate and served as its first president. When The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) modified stake boundaries in 1900, dividing the new Granite Stake off from the Salt Lake Stake, Cannon became the Sunday School Superintendent of the new stake. From 1901 until after 1930, Cannon served as", "id": "8629874" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nat the University of Utah and then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received a B.S. degree in mining engineering. In 1899, Cannon began an LDS Church mission in Belgium. Cannon then served from 1900 to 1902 as president of the church's Netherlands–Belgium Mission. Cannon also served as Francis M. Lyman's secretary on a three-month trip to many nations along the Mediterranean and in the Middle East. From 1916 to 1925, Cannon served as president of the Pioneer Stake in Salt Lake City. In", "id": "2194373" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\nAbraham Hoagland Cannon (also reported as Abram H. Cannon) (March 12, 1859 – July 19, 1896) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. His parents were George Q. Cannon, a Latter Day Saints apostle, and Elizabeth Hoagland, daughter of Abraham Hoagland. Cannon studied at Deseret University. Later, he studied architecture under Obed Taylor. Cannon married Sarah A.", "id": "9035314" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nSr. and Luella Wareing. He was born at his parents' home because of the 1918 influenza pandemic. Cannon's paternal grandfather was George Q. Cannon, a Mormon pioneer and prominent leader in the LDS Church. Cannon was raised in Salt Lake City. In 1937, Cannon went on a mission for the LDS Church to Nazi Germany. He was president of a branch of the church in Berlin in 1939 when the LDS Church evacuated its missionaries from Europe at the beginning of World War II. Cannon finished his mission in", "id": "9582823" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\n. Callville was submerged when Lake Mead was filled. In 1869 and 1870, Cannon served a second mission in the Eastern United States. In April 1876, Cannon became president of the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. He served in this position until April 1, 1904. After his time as stake president, Cannon served as a patriarch in the church. Cannon was the mayor of St. George, Utah Territory in 1861 and 1862. In 1896, after Utah had become a U.S. state, he stood for election", "id": "7202652" }, { "contents": "Donald Q. Cannon\n\n\nDonald Quayle Cannon (born 1936) is a retired professor at Brigham Young University who specializes in Mormon history, particularly early Mormon history and international Mormon history. As a young man, Cannon was a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Germany. Cannon earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Utah. Cannon holds a Ph.D. from Clark University. In the late 1960s, he taught at the University of Southern Maine. In the LDS Church he has", "id": "10057919" }, { "contents": "George Goddard (Mormon)\n\n\nwas the clerk to LDS Church presiding bishop Edward Hunter. From 1874 to 1884, Goddard was the clerk of the LDS Church's biannual general conferences. In 1872, Goddard became the inaugural first assistant to George Q. Cannon, the first superintendent of the Deseret Sunday School Union. Goddard served in this capacity for 26 years, until his death in 1899. Goddard was also a member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and a patriarch in the church. He died in Salt Lake City and was buried at Salt Lake City Cemetery.", "id": "7701639" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nuntil their arrival in Utah. In 1854, Cannon went on a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to the Eastern United States, where he assisted John Taylor in publishing a periodical entitled \"The Mormon\". He also preached and baptized in Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware. Cannon returned to Utah Territory due to the troubles connected with the Utah War. In 1864, Cannon helped establish Call's Landing on the Colorado River, later known as Callville, Nevada", "id": "7202651" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nJanath Russell Cannon (October 28, 1918 – July 5, 2007) was a counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was also a prominent missionary in the church and was among the first to preach to black people in Africa. Born in Ogden, Utah, Janath Russell was educated at Wellesley College. In 1941, she married Edwin Q. Cannon in the Salt Lake Temple. From 1971 to 1974,", "id": "9582964" }, { "contents": "Joseph A. Cannon\n\n\nserved as an assistant administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from 1983 to 1985. Joseph A. Cannon was born on July 31, 1949. Cannon served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Ireland, including on the Isle of Man, the ancestral homeland of the Cannons. Cannon received a degree in political science and, in 1977, a law degree from Brigham Young University. Cannon served as a law clerk in Salt Lake City for U.S. District", "id": "7202830" }, { "contents": "Elaine A. Cannon\n\n\nElaine Anderson Cannon (April 9, 1922 – May 19, 2003) was the eighth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 to 1984. Cannon has been a writer and an editor and is the author of over 50 books. Elaine Anderson was born to Aldon Joseph and Minnie Egan Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a teenager, she started writing a daily column aimed at teenagers for the \"Deseret News\". She", "id": "1682052" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nAdele Morris Cannon Howells (January 11, 1886 – April 14, 1951) was the fourth general president of the Primary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1943 until her death of rheumatic heart disease. She contributed to \"The Children's Friend\" magazine, as well as the fundraising for the Children's Primary Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. Adele Morris Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to George Mousley Cannon and Marian Adelaide Morris. She", "id": "1336419" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\nGeorgius Young Cannon (March 6, 1892 – March 29, 1987) was a 20th-century architect in the American West who operated principally out of Salt Lake City, Utah. Cannon trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), graduating in 1918. He then joined the army and later returned to Utah to intern with the architectural firm Ware & Treganza and Cannon & Fetzer. He served two missions to Germany for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). For a time", "id": "12786285" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Quayle Cannon (January 11, 1827 – April 12, 1901) was an early member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), and served in the First Presidency under four successive presidents of the church: Brigham Young, John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. He was the church's chief political strategist, and was dubbed \"the Mormon premier\" and \"the Mormon Richelieu\" by the press. He was also a five", "id": "19825263" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nwas the oldest of nine children, and her father George Cannon was the first president of the Utah State Senate. As a child, Cannon suffered from rheumatic fever. She enjoyed reading in her spare time and horseback riding. She was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Cannon attended schools in Salt Lake City and graduated from the LDS High School and Business College in 1903. She attended the University of Utah and studied physical education and graduated with her bachelor's degree in 1909. Cannon", "id": "1336420" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nis one of the few general authorities of the LDS Church to have been excommunicated. From 1889 until 1892, Cannon was the editor of the \"Ogden Standard\". From October 1892 until April 1898, he was the editor in chief of the \"Deseret News\". After the Spanish–American War he returned to work at the \"Deseret News\" and served as an executive editor of the newspaper off-and-on until his death. He was much beloved by his co-workers. Cannon was a member", "id": "7202722" }, { "contents": "Tracy Y. Cannon\n\n\nLatter-day Saints. In 1939, he was made second assistant to Melvin J. Ballard, supervisor of the committee. From 1915 to 1927, Cannon was a member of the high council of the Pioneer Stake of the LDS Church. In 1917, he became a member of the Deseret Sunday School Union General Board. From 1930 through 1936, Cannon was bishop of the Cannon Ward in Salt Lake City. Cannon was an editor of the 1927 LDS Church hymnal. In 1925, Cannon was appointed director of the McCune School", "id": "12019030" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe church's Welsh-language periodical, \"Udgorn Seion\". From 1867 to 1874, Cannon was the managing editor of the \"Deseret News\". It was under his direction that the newspaper was first published on a daily basis. In 1866, Cannon began publication of a magazine for youth and young adult Latter-day Saints called \"The Juvenile Instructor\". He owned and published this magazine until his death; in 1901 his family sold the magazine to the LDS Church's Sunday School organization. The periodical was", "id": "19825272" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nCannon and her husband were heads of the Switzerland Mission of the LDS Church. Upon their return to Utah in 1974, Cannon became the first counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the church's Relief Society. Cannon served in this capacity until 1978, when she was released so that she and her husband could become the first missionaries of the church to preach in \"black Africa\". They — along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey — preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 27", "id": "9582965" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\nan LDS Church organization responsible for educating young members of the LDS church, and the magazine was the first church periodical oriented toward youth. Cannon opened the George Q. Cannon & Sons bookstore in 1867 to sell the magazine and other publications of an uplifting nature. Cannon believed that secular novels did not reflect Latter-day Saint values. In the 1880s, Cannon expanded with a branch in Ogden, Utah. It is not known how many books Cannon & Sons actually published itself. In this era, authors commonly self-published", "id": "18344085" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n. Cannon was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. Cannon fathered 32 children, some of whom are Abraham H. Cannon, John Q. Cannon, and Sylvester Q. Cannon, who all became general authorities of the LDS Church; Frank J. Cannon, Utah's first U.S. Senator; and Lewis T. Cannon and Georgius Y. Cannon, prominent architects in Utah. Some of Cannon's prominent descendants include Howard Cannon, U.S. Senator from Nevada from 1959 to 1983 and Chris Cannon, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1997 to", "id": "19825281" }, { "contents": "Salt Lake City Council Hall\n\n\nwho was then the official architect for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Built at First South and 120 East (more on Salt Lake City's coordinate system), sandstone for the structure was delivered from Red Butte Canyon on Utah's first chartered railroad. The well-furnished Greek revival building was completed at a cost of $70,000. In January 1866, City Hall was dedicated by George Q. Cannon, a prominent LDS leader. Many other LDS leaders attended the dedication including Brigham", "id": "19382830" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\n, Cannon moved to Los Angeles and worked as the office manager of his MIT schoolmate Wallace Neff. He later returned to Utah and designed numerous buildings, mostly residences, and some of which remain on the National Register of Historic Places. Among his works were meetinghouses of the LDS Church and other civic buildings. Cannon served on a church-appointed board of six architects that oversaw the construction of the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple. Cannon was the youngest of 32 children born to LDS Church leader George Q. Cannon. His mother,", "id": "12786286" }, { "contents": "Karl G. Maeser\n\n\nin the General Superintendency of the Deseret Sunday School Union. He was the Second Assistant to General Superintendent George Q. Cannon from July 1894 to January 1899. He then served as the First Assistant to Cannon from January 1899 until February 1901. Maeser also participated in the Utah constitutional convention after Abraham Smoot's death in 1895. He proposed an article to support prohibition, but later backed down. Missionaries from the LDS Church were removed from California in 1858 due to the Utah War. Missionary work resumed in 1892. Maeser presided over", "id": "11030473" }, { "contents": "Frank B. Woodbury\n\n\nFrank Bartlett Woodbury (December 27, 1867 – December 21, 1962) was a leader of and an Acting Presiding Patriarch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), one of only three church members to hold this position in church history. Born in St. George, Utah Territory, to Orin Nelson Woodbury and Ann Cannon, Woodbury served in many capacities in the church on a local level. Some, but not all, LDS Church sources list Woodbury as \"Acting Presiding Patriarch\" of", "id": "8238754" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand 1958 and served three full terms. From 1964 to 1971, Cannon was a bishop of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. From 1971 to 1974, he was the president of the Switzerland Mission of the church. In 1978, three weeks after the LDS Church announced that it would no longer impose restrictions of black people receiving the priesthood or participating in temple ordinances, Cannon traveled to Africa on behalf of the church with Merrill J. Bateman to assess the prospects for church missionary work and growth in \"black Africa\"", "id": "9582825" }, { "contents": "Amasa Lyman\n\n\n). Lyman served as the first mayor of San Bernardino. In 1860, Young appointed three of the twelve apostles—Lyman, Charles C. Rich, and George Q. Cannon—to the presidency of the church's European Mission. On March 16, 1862, Lyman preached a sermon in Dundee, Scotland, which all but denied the reality of and the necessity for the atonement of Jesus Christ, which is a central tenet of the LDS Church. His speech appeared to have been overlooked for years, but on January 21", "id": "12068047" }, { "contents": "Mark E. Petersen\n\n\nMark Edward Petersen (November 7, 1900 – January 11, 1984) was an American news editor and religious leader who served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1944 until his death. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, he filled the vacancy in the Quorum caused by the excommunication of Richard R. Lyman. Petersen had become managing editor of the church-owned \"Deseret News\" in 1935 and editor in 1941.", "id": "2692480" }, { "contents": "Thomas C. Griggs\n\n\nthe LDS Church's Aaronic priesthood; his call to this office was given by Apostle George Q. Cannon. With the outbreak of the American Civil War, the Griggs heeded the counsel of LDS Church leaders to move to Utah Territory. The Griggs crossed the plains in Joseph Horne's Mormon pioneer company in 1861. Griggs first joined the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in 1866 when Charles John Thomas was the director. Griggs would continue as a member of the choir until his death in 1903. While Robert Sands was the conductor of the choir", "id": "9481149" }, { "contents": "Charles Clarence Neslen\n\n\nfrom Germany and he was imprisoned in Danzig. He served as president of the Königsberg District of the LDS Church for a part of his mission. Neslen was a member of the Democratic Party and a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1912. Neslen worked a total of 15 years for the \"Deseret News\". He was also a realtor and for a time served as secretary of the Salt Lake Real Estate Association. On October 26, 1905, Neslen married Grace T. Cannon, a daughter of George Q. Cannon.", "id": "21092533" }, { "contents": "Stephen L. Chipman\n\n\nStephen L. Chipman (1864–1945) was a member of the Utah State Legislature in 1903 and a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Utah County. He was also the first president of the Salt Lake Temple who was not also an apostle in the LDS Church. Chipman studied at Brigham Young Academy (the predecessor of Brigham Young University (BYU)) as a youth. From 1885 to 1887 he served as a Mormon missionary in the Southern States Mission of the LDS Church", "id": "15228384" }, { "contents": "Mountain Meadows massacre and Mormon public relations\n\n\nCannon, then president of the LDS California Mission. In the October 13, 1857 edition of Cannon's San Francisco newspaper \"The Western Standard\", Cannon responded to initial news reports of involvement by Mormons by charging the responsible journalists with writing \"reckless and malignant slanders\", despite knowing that the southern Utah Mormons were \"as innocent of [the massacre] as the child unborn\". The church's official newspaper in Salt Lake City, \"The Deseret News\", was initially slow to comment on the massacre,", "id": "22212632" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas the second-most senior apostle of the church after the death of Woodruff, Cannon did not become President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, as would be the practice in the LDS Church today. Rather, because Cannon was a member of the First Presidency, the church simply appointed the next senior apostle of the church—Brigham Young, Jr.—to be the quorum president. (Under today's practices, Cannon would have been appointed the president of the quorum and Young would have been appointed acting president.) Cannon", "id": "19825274" }, { "contents": "Clifford E. Young\n\n\nClifford Earle Young (December 7, 1883 – August 21, 1958) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1941 until his death. Young was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, the son of LDS Church leader Seymour B. Young. From 1905 to 1908, he served as a Mormon missionary in England and Germany. In 1928, Young became the president of the Alpine Stake of the LDS Church in Utah. In 1934, he joined the", "id": "8315768" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n33. Upon his joining the Quorum of the Twelve, Cannon was called to preside over the church's European Mission. Cannon's mission in Europe ended when he was recalled by Young in 1862 to work in Washington, D.C., to assist in the church's promotion of Utah Territory's bid for statehood. At the adjournment of the 1862 congressional session, Cannon again left for Europe to preside over the mission. In this capacity, Cannon was the editor of the \"Millennial Star\" and, for a short time,", "id": "19825271" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nfrom the federal authorities. In September 1888, Cannon surrendered himself and pleaded guilty at trial to charges of unlawful cohabitation under the Edmunds Act. As a result, Cannon served nearly six months in Utah's federal penitentiary. Cannon was pardoned in 1894 by U.S. President Grover Cleveland. Cannon died on April 12, 1901, in Monterey, California, at 74 years of age. Had he lived a few months longer, he would have become the President of the LDS Church: Lorenzo Snow died on October 10 of that year", "id": "19825280" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Isle of Man\n\n\nand Idaho which descends from the 19th century marriage of George Cannon and Ann Quayle before their emigration from Peel, Isle of Man. The family's most notable member was their oldest son George Quayle Cannon. The family is connected by marriage to the Bennion, Taylor, Wells and Young political families. LDS Membership statistics as of January 1, 2011 for the Isle of Man. The nation of the Isle of Man does not have its own mission. Instead it is served by an English mission. Five out of the six", "id": "7797107" }, { "contents": "The Contributor (LDS magazine)\n\n\nThe Contributor was an independent publication associated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) between 1879 and 1896. It was a monthly periodical and sought to represent the Young Men's and Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Associations (YMMIA and YLMIA respectively), the youth organizations of the LDS Church at the time. It was founded by Junius F. Wells, the inaugural head of the YMMIA. Abraham H. Cannon became editor when the magazine was purchased by the Cannon Publishing Company in 1892. With the", "id": "505110" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe official organ of the Sunday School until 1930, when it was replaced with \"The Instructor\". Cannon also served as the first general superintendent of the church's Sunday School from 1867 until his death. On April 8, 1873, Cannon became a member of the church's First Presidency when he was called as the first counselor by Brigham Young. Cannon went on to serve as counselor to three more presidents of the church: he was First Counselor to John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. Although Cannon", "id": "19825273" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\ntogether. Prior to her service in the general Primary presidency, Clara Cannon was a counselor in the presidencies of the Primary and Relief Society in the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. When Louie B. Felt became the first general presidency of the Primary, Matilda M. Barratt and Cannon were selected as Felt's counselors. Cannon was a counselor until 1895; the next year she was succeeded in the position by Josephine R. West. Clara Moses Cannon died of throat cancer in Centerville, Utah, aged 87 and was interred in", "id": "10663424" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nScouts of America and served in the organization's Great Salt Lake Council. Prior to his call as a general authority, Cannon served in the church as a bishop, stake president, patriarch, temple sealer, and regional representative. He was also the president of the church's Central British Mission from 1966 to 1969. From 1969 to 1972, Cannon was an assistant and counselor to W. Jay Eldredge, the general superintendent of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association. Cannon became a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy", "id": "8339580" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe Nauvoo Legion. During this time, Cannon served as printer of the \"Deseret News\" while it was publishing in exile in Fillmore, Utah. After the Utah War, he was called as president of the church's Eastern States Mission. The murder of Parley P. Pratt in 1857 created a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. That vacancy was not filled until Brigham Young called Cannon to the apostleship three years later. Cannon was ordained to the priesthood office of apostle on August 26, 1860, at age", "id": "19825270" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nin the Sandwich Islands (later known as the Kingdom of Hawaii), where he served for four years. While in the islands, Cannon converted many Native Hawaiians. One of the most notable was Jonatana Napela, who assisted Cannon in translating the Book of Mormon into Hawaiian. Joseph F. Smith, a future church president, would follow Cannon and serve in Hawaii one year later. Returning to Utah Territory, Cannon married Elizabeth Hoagland (daughter of Abraham Hoagland and his wife.) He was almost immediately called to assist apostle", "id": "19825268" }, { "contents": "Ronald E. Poelman\n\n\nRonald Eugene Poelman (May 10, 1928 – November 19, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 until his death. In 1984, he delivered a controversial sermon in the LDS Church's general conference which the church redacted before publishing. Poelman was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to a Latter-day Saint family. As a young man, he served as a Mormon missionary in the LDS Church's Netherlands Mission. He began his", "id": "4765396" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\n. He would marry Martha Brown of Ogden in 1878. In 1891 he helped to organize the Utah Republican Party. After a failed bid to become delegate from the Utah Territory, he succeeded and served from March 4, 1895, to January 4, 1896. Cannon was chosen in 1896 to serve as senator by the Utah Legislature in spite of LDS church leadership favoring his father for the job. He served in the United States Senate, initially, as a member of the Republican Party; however, he later became a", "id": "11000346" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nmember of the Silver Republican Party, founded by his successor (and future employer at \"The Salt Lake Tribune\") Thomas Kearns. Cannon lost re-election in 1899. Utah's state legislators indicated they would not support Cannon for re-election shortly after the November 1898 elections. Cannon had voted against the Dingley Act, which would have raised tariffs on sugar and helped the Utah sugar industry. It was strongly supported by the LDS Church hierarchy, who now opposed his re-election. Other factors were his support", "id": "11000347" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand Ghana. The first convert baptized in Africa was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and his wife were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' centre in Nauvoo, Illinois. For three months in 1989, Cannon was the interim president of the LDS Church's Germany Hamburg Mission; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. After his interim service as mission president, Cannon was the second president of the Frankfurt Germany Temple from 1989 to", "id": "9582827" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nCounselor to William B. Preston, the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church; he served in this position between 1884 and 1886. In 1884, shortly after Cannon had become a general authority, a sensationalized news story by Joseph Lippman in the \"Salt Lake Tribune\" alleged that Cannon had taken his wife's sister Louie Wells as a plural wife. Lippman suggested that Cannon and Wells had been married in the Logan Temple. In fact, there had been no such marriage, though it was later revealed that Cannon and Wells had", "id": "7202724" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nbranches of the LDS Church in Nigeria and Ghana. The first convert baptized in Nigeria was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and her husband were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' center in Nauvoo, Illinois. In 1989, they served as interim leaders of the Germany Hamburg Mission of the church; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. From 1989 to 1992, Cannon was the matron of the Frankfurt Germany Temple while her husband", "id": "9582966" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\n's Quorum of the Twelve. Abraham was a son of George Q. Cannon, an early member of the church's First Presidency. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary in the church's Central States Mission. After his mission, he served in the United States Air Force during the Second World War. In 1946, he began attending Brigham Young University (BYU). After graduating from BYU, Cannon became a vice president of Beneficial Life Insurance Company in Salt Lake City. He was active in the Boy", "id": "8339579" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\n1925, Cannon became the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church, succeeding Charles W. Nibley. Cannon's counselors were David A. Smith and John Wells. In 1938, Cannon was released as Presiding Bishop and was succeeded by LeGrand Richards. At the same time, Cannon was ordained an apostle and made an \"associate\" of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, a unique position that had never been filled before. When Quorum member Melvin J. Ballard died the next year, Cannon became a full member of the Quorum; he served", "id": "2194374" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\nClarissa Cordelia (\"Clara\") Moses Cannon (April 21, 1839 – August 21, 1926) was a Mormon pioneer and a member of the first-ever general presidency of the Primary organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). She was the second counselor to general president Louie B. Felt from 1880 to 1895. Clara Moses was born in Westfield, Massachusetts. In 1846 she took the six-month journey on the ship \"Brooklyn\" from New York City to San", "id": "10663422" }, { "contents": "Leonora Cannon Taylor\n\n\nLeonora Cannon Taylor (October 6, 1796–December 9, 1868) was a member of the Relief Society organization at the time of its origin and the first wife of John Taylor, the third president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). On October 6, 1796 in Peel, Isle of Man, Leonora Cannon was born to George Cannon and Leonora Callister. As the oldest daughter in the family, when Leonora's father died when she was thirteen she went away to London to work", "id": "16190675" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\ntheir books, which were then distributed by others. However, Cannon & Sons distributed several important books through their stores and mail order (see table). The company had extensive ties to the LDS Church-owned newspaper, the \"Deseret News.\" Five of Cannon's sons held important positions in the paper, and Cannon himself was editor between 1867 and 1872, and again while temporarily owning the paper from 1892 to 1898. Nearly every George Q. Cannon & Sons book was printed on the \"Deseret News\" press", "id": "18344086" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nof the Utah Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Cannon was the oldest son of George Q. Cannon and the one most expected to follow in his prominent father's footsteps in politics, church office, and journalism. Heber J. Grant once said of Cannon: \"There probably is not a young man in the church who had had more opportunities and advantages extended to him educationally, spiritually, and every other way than John Q. Cannon.\" At the age of 27, Cannon was called to serve as the Second", "id": "7202723" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nMartha Maria \"Mattie\" Hughes Cannon (July 1, 1857 – July 10, 1932) was a Welsh-born immigrant to the United States, a polygamous wife, physician, Utah women's rights advocate and suffragist, and Utah State Senator. Her family immigrated to the United States as converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and traveled West to settle in Utah territory with other Mormons. She started working at the age of fourteen. At sixteen she enrolled in the University", "id": "15993465" }, { "contents": "Church Office Building\n\n\nThe Church Office Building is a 28-story building in Salt Lake City, Utah, which houses the administrative support staff for the lay ministry of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) throughout the world. The building is 420 ft (128 m) tall at roof level and is located within the Temple Square complex on the corner of North Temple and State Street. The building was designed by George Cannon Young at a cost of US$31 million to build. Construction took place from 1962 to 1972", "id": "13754819" }, { "contents": "John Lyman Smith\n\n\nJohn Lyman Smith (November 17, 1828 – February 21, 1898) was an American politician and Mormon missionary. He served as a member of the Utah Territory's Legislative Assembly's House of Representatives for Iron County, Utah, from 1852 to 1853, and the Great Salt Lake County, Utah, from 1853 to 1855. Cousin of the founder of the Latter Day Saint Movement, Joseph Smith, Smith was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) who traveled to the", "id": "18219861" }, { "contents": "Francis M. Lyman\n\n\nFrancis Marion Lyman (January 12, 1840 – November 18, 1916) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was the President of the Quorum from 1903 until his death. Lyman's father and son were also apostles in the church: his father was Amasa M. Lyman and his son was Richard R. Lyman. Both his father and son were excommunicated from the church while serving as apostles. Francis M. Lyman was born as", "id": "20761093" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nAngus Munn Cannon (May 17, 1834 – June 7, 1915) was an early Latter Day Saint leader and Mormon pioneer. Cannon was born in Liverpool, Lancashire, England. His Manx parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 1840, being baptized by his uncle John Taylor. In 1842, the Cannon family went to Nauvoo, Illinois, United States. By 1849, they were in Utah Territory. Cannon was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon and their lives followed very similar paths up", "id": "7202650" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\naffairs while Taylor recovered. This training would serve him well in later life. Cannon's father died in 1845. In 1846, Taylor traveled to England to organize the affairs of the church after Smith's death. Meanwhile, Cannon accompanied Taylor's wife and family as they moved to Winter Quarters, Nebraska. When Taylor returned, Cannon traveled with the entire Taylor family to the Salt Lake Valley, arriving in October 1847. In 1849, Cannon was asked by church president Brigham Young to serve as a missionary for the church", "id": "19825267" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nstaying in the position until December 31, 1903. Cannon attempted to prohibit children not vaccinated from attending school in case of a disease outbreak. The Board of Health sent out vaccines; however, the \"Deseret News\" spread information that vaccines weren't safe. LDS Church leaders were divided on the subject. One apostle, Brigham Young Jr. was very vocal in his opinions, writing in the \"Deseret News\" about the evils of vaccinations. The influence of the \"Deseret News\" and Mormon religious leaders limited how many", "id": "15993490" }, { "contents": "Billy Johnson (Mormon)\n\n\nLDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball announced Official Declaration 2 which extended the priesthood to all worthy male members of the church regardless of race or color. In gratitude, Johnson sent a letter to Kimball, explaining that God had prepared the people in Ghana, asking him to send missionaries to the members. Kimball responded to his pleas and sent the first called missionaries Rendell N. Mabey and Rachel Mabey. They joined Edwin Q. Cannon and Janath R. Cannon. Johnson was finally baptized into the LDS Church on December 9, 1978. He", "id": "4108521" }, { "contents": "Juvenile Instructor\n\n\ncatechisms on the Bible, Book of Mormon, and Doctrine and Covenants; musical compositions; illustrations; stories; editorial teachings; and other aids to gospel instruction. It was the first magazine for children published in the United States west of the Mississippi River. For much of its history, \"The Juvenile Instructor\" was owned by the Cannon family. Its first editor was George Q. Cannon, an apostle in the LDS Church. Cannon and his family continued to publish the magazine privately until January 1, 1901, when the", "id": "9210614" }, { "contents": "Joseph F. Smith\n\n\nand as second counselor to Lorenzo Snow (1898–1901). Smith was appointed first counselor to Snow on the death of first counselor George Q. Cannon, but, as Snow himself died only four days later, Smith never served in that position. He succeeded Snow as president of the LDS Church and president of the Salt Lake Temple. He served as president of the temple until 1911, when he transferred the responsibility to Anthon H. Lund. Smith also served as editor of the \"Improvement Era\" and \"Juvenile Instructor\",", "id": "4117444" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in California\n\n\nQ. Cannon began publication in San Francisco of the \"Western Standard\", a weekly periodical supportive of the Church. The first colonization from Utah to California came in 1851 when a company of about 450 saints and slaves under direction of Elders Amasa M. Lyman and Charles C. Rich of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles settled at what is now San Bernardino. The colony was the final settlement in a string of Mormon communities extending from Salt Lake City in an area known as Deseret. The community thrived, and on July 6,", "id": "22187256" }, { "contents": "Sunday School (LDS Church)\n\n\nout. On November 11, 1867, Young and church leaders Daniel H. Wells, George A. Smith, Wilford Woodruff, George Q. Cannon, and Brigham Young, Jr. met and organized the Parent Sunday School Union. Young appointed Cannon as the first general superintendent of the Sunday School, a position he would hold until his death in 1901. In 1872, the Sunday School organization was renamed the Deseret Sunday School Union. The organized Sunday School addressed lesson topics and source materials, grading, prizes and rewards, use of hymns", "id": "8671425" }, { "contents": "Hugh W. Pinnock\n\n\nHugh Wallace Pinnock (January 15, 1934 – December 16, 2000) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Pinnock was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Western States Mission. Pinnock graduated from University of Utah in 1958, where he became a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity and Owl and Key. Prior to his call to the First", "id": "8519001" }, { "contents": "Charles W. Penrose\n\n\nwas organized Penrose was called as a member of the high council. In 1877, Penrose became the assistant editor of the LDS Church-owned \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, working under George Q. Cannon. Penrose was known for his writing, including missionary tracts and lyrics of Latter-day Saint hymns, including \"God of Our Fathers\", \"O Ye Mountains High\", and \"Up, Awake, Ye Defenders of Zion\". In 1880, Penrose became the editor-in-chief of", "id": "2194239" }, { "contents": "Rulon S. Wells\n\n\nRulon Seymour Wells (July 7, 1854 – May 7, 1941) was a Utah politician and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1893 until his death. Wells was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to LDS Church leader Daniel H. Wells (1814–1891) and Louisa Free (1824–1886). In 1875, Wells travelled to Europe as a Mormon missionary and worked primarily in Germany and Switzerland. He returned to the United States in 1877. On", "id": "8315459" }, { "contents": "G. Homer Durham\n\n\nGeorge Homer Durham (February 4, 1911 – January 10, 1985) was an American academic administrator and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Durham was born in Parowan, Utah, and was raised in Salt Lake City. As a boy in grade school, he met and became lifelong friends with future LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley. As a young man, Durham served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the British", "id": "21588256" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nJonatana Napela or Jonathan Hawaii Napela (first name also spelled Iohatana, full name Napelakapuonamahanaonaleleonalani) (September 11, 1813 – August 6, 1879) was one of the earliest Hawaiian converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Hawaii, joining in the 1830s. He helped translate the Book of Mormon into the Hawaiian language, as \"Ka Buke a Moramona,\" working with missionary George Q. Cannon. Napela was appointed to serve as a superintendent of the colony at Kalaupapa, Molokai", "id": "16647246" }, { "contents": "Richfield, Utah\n\n\nserves about 600 students per year. As in most settled areas of rural Utah, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) plays a prominent role. The Mormons were highly industrious colonizers. From 1847, when they founded Salt Lake City, until 1877, they founded 360 towns. Following direction from Brigham Young, Latter-day Saints founded the town and outlying hamlets about 150 years ago. Members of the LDS Church are predominant among the residents. Even in this heart of Mormon country,", "id": "11082836" }, { "contents": "Marvin O. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Owen Ashton (April 8, 1883 – October 7, 1946) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1938 until his death. Prior to becoming a general authority, Ashton was a prominent local leader of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City, Utah. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Mormon parents. He married Rachel Grace Jeremy in 1906 and in 1907 went to England as a missionary for the LDS Church. He returned", "id": "14505232" }, { "contents": "LeGrand Richards\n\n\nLeGrand Richards (February 6, 1886 – January 11, 1983) was a prominent missionary and leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He served as the seventh presiding bishop of the LDS Church from 1938 to 1952, and was then called as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles by church president David O. McKay. Richards served in the Quorum of the Twelve until his death in Salt Lake City, Utah, at the age of 96. Richards was born in", "id": "2294374" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nwas educated at Lahainaluna School. Napela was trained as a lawyer. He was serving as a judge in Wailuku, Hawaii, when he met American George Q. Cannon, a member of the LDS Church on a missionary trip to Hawaii. After Napela's conversion in the 1830s to the LDS Church, the government forced the judge to resign from his position. The LDS Church was regarded with suspicion. LDS Church historian Andrew Jensen said that Napela \"did splendid missionary work for the Church.\" Napela was sent on a specific", "id": "16647248" }, { "contents": "Gardo House\n\n\ncounselor George Q. Cannon and other church leaders suggested that Taylor occupy the Gardo House after its completion, but he repeatedly refused. However, when church members unanimously voted on April 9, 1879, to make the Gardo House the official parsonage for LDS Church presidents, Taylor reluctantly accepted their decision. Moses Thatcher, William Jennings, and Angus M. Cannon were appointed as a committee to oversee completion of the mansion. On December 27, 1881, the Deseret News published a letter from John Taylor announcing a public reception and tour of", "id": "1496184" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nStates Mission of the church in 1901. In 1902, Grant married George J. Cannon. In 1923, Cannon was asked to succeed Mae Taylor Nystrom as the second counselor to Martha Horne Tingey, the general president of what was then called the Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Association. In 1929, when Ruth May Fox succeeded Tingey, Cannon was asked to be her first counselor. Cannon served in this capacity until 1929, when Fox was released and Cannon was selected by her father, who was President of the Church, to", "id": "1681854" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\n. (At the time, Cannon was a counselor to James E. Faust in the church's International Mission, which had jurisdiction over all areas of the world not otherwise part of a mission.) After Bateman and Cannon reported the results of their trip, Cannon and his wife were called and set apart as the first Mormon missionaries to black Africa. They—along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey—preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 35 branches and 5 districts of the LDS Church in Nigeria", "id": "9582826" }, { "contents": "Marion D. Hanks\n\n\nMarion Duff Hanks (October 13, 1921 – August 5, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1953 until his death. Hanks was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man he served in the Northern States Mission of the LDS Church, which was headquartered in Chicago. He was in the United States Navy during World War II and received a J.D. from the University of Utah. Prior to his call as a general authority", "id": "6558935" }, { "contents": "Lillie T. Freeze\n\n\nthe Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association (YLMIA). In this capacity, she was invited to speak at the Salt Lake Tabernacle on April 6, 1880, at a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the LDS Church's founding. In 1880, Lillie Freeze was one of the founding members of the LDS Church's Primary Association. Freeze was appointed as the first secretary of the general presidency, which was composed of Louie B. Felt, Matilda M. Barratt, and Clara C. M. Cannon. Freeze was secretary until 1888, when", "id": "10906695" }, { "contents": "Henry D. Taylor\n\n\nHenry Dixon Taylor (November 22, 1903 – February 24, 1987) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1958 until his death. Taylor was born in Provo, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Eastern States Mission. During his mission, Taylor was the president of the church's Connecticut District. Taylor received a bachelor's degree from Brigham Young University (BYU) and a master's degree", "id": "2477100" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas elected to be the non-voting delegate for Utah Territory in the United States Congress in 1872. He remained a congressional delegate until 1882, when his seat was declared vacant by the enactment of the Edmunds Act, which terminated many political and civil rights for Utah's Mormon polygamists. By 1880, Cannon had served four terms in Congress as Territorial Delegate. The newly appointed anti-Mormon territorial governor, Eli Houston Murray, openly supported the Liberal Party, which generally opposed church candidates. The 1880 territory-wide election", "id": "19825275" }, { "contents": "George F. Richards\n\n\nGeorge Franklin Richards (February 23, 1861 – August 8, 1950) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from April 9, 1906 until his death. He also served as Acting Presiding Patriarch of the LDS Church from 1937 to 1942 and President of the Quorum of the Twelve from May 25, 1945 until his death. Richards was born in Farmington, Utah Territory, the son of Franklin D. Richards and Nanny Longstroth. Richards", "id": "2194252" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\n1882, at the age of 23, Cannon assumed business control of the \"Juvenile Instructor\" and associated publications. He continued his management until his death. In October 1892, Cannon and his brother John Q. Cannon took control of the \"Deseret News\" publishing. He also became the editor and publisher of \"The Contributor\". On October 9, 1882, Cannon became a member of the First Seven Presidents of the Seventy of the church. On October 7, 1889, church president Wilford Woodruff named Cannon a member", "id": "9035316" }, { "contents": "Howard Cannon\n\n\nHis grandfather David Cannon, was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon, and a leading figure in the building of the St. George Temple, who was later the third president of that temple. His father Walter Cannon was one of David Cannon's 31 children. Howard's parents had married in 1909, his mother was Leah Sullivan. When Cannon was two years old his father left for England to served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for two years. Cannon went to Woodward School in", "id": "18060013" }, { "contents": "Mormon fiction\n\n\nMormons were generally non-fiction, including scripture, missionary tracts, and doctrinal literature. In 1844, Parley P. Pratt published what is commonly cited as the first work of LDS fiction, the didactic \"Dialogue between Joseph Smith and the Devil\". It was first published in the New York Herald. Early Mormon leaders like Brigham Young and George Q. Cannon condemned novels for wasting time, a rhetoric that persisted until the 1880s. Fiction among LDS Church members developed once the Mormons had settled in Utah and developed a degree of", "id": "453087" }, { "contents": "Marvin J. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Jeremy Ashton (May 6, 1915 – February 25, 1994) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1971 until his death. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was the son of Marvin O. Ashton, a local LDS leader, who later became a church general authority. The younger Ashton worked in the lumber business as a youth. He graduated from the University of Utah. He served a", "id": "19825413" }, { "contents": "Rudger Clawson\n\n\nRudger Judd Clawson (March 12, 1857 – June 21, 1943) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1898 until his death in 1943. He also served as President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1921 until his death and as a member of the First Presidency of the LDS Church for five days in 1901. Clawson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to Hiram Bradley Clawson and Margaret Judd", "id": "9035430" }, { "contents": "Utah-Idaho Sugar Company\n\n\npayment and a $130,000 loan. Cutler also went to Chicago and New York City to secure loans from banks; he came back, via train, with a bag full of money, as he did not think any banks in Utah could have cashed the large bank draft. The LDS church made more payments and secured more loans. In addition, George Q. Cannon and Heber J. Grant personally funded the enterprise. Joseph F. Smith, president of the LDS Church, gave a sermon in 1893 explaining that this was done to", "id": "1319991" }, { "contents": "President of the Church (LDS Church)\n\n\nthe President of the Quorum. When Woodruff died, his counselors returned to the Quorum based on the date they were ordained an apostle, placing George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith below Brigham Young Jr. and John Willard Young. Heber J. Grant objected to that arguing that seniority should be based on ordination to the Quorum rather than ordination as an apostle. Young argued that an apostle should not be demoted as long as he is worthy of the position. On March 31, 1900, Snow met with his counselors, Cannon and", "id": "16343191" }, { "contents": "Alfred W. McCune\n\n\n. Judge Orlando Powers, Associate Justice of the Utah Supreme Court, said in 1906 that he understood that McCune was not a Mormon. Frank J. Cannon, too, claimed McCune was not a Mormon, and B. H. Roberts, LDS Church historian and member of the First Council of the Seventy, said in 1930 that McCune was not a church member. Historian Orvin Malmquist, however, says that church records show he was baptized into the LDS Church at the age of eight in 1857, and that his marriage to Elizabeth", "id": "15062757" } ]
Joseph Jenne Cannon ( May 22 , 1877 -- November 5 , 1945 ) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ( LDS Church ) . He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family . As a young man , Cannon served as a for the LDS Church in [START_ENT] Europe [END_ENT] . He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903 . Lyman and Cannon also similarly dedicated Finland in 1903 . In the 1908 election , Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from . He served one term , from 1909 to 1911 . Cannon was not formally associated with any political party . From 1931 to 1934 , Cannon was the editor of the Deseret News , a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church . His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church 's British Mission . Cannon served in this capacity for three years , until 1937 . Immediately following his return to Utah , Cannon was asked to become the first assistant to George Q. Morris , the general superintendent of the church 's . Cannon served in this capacity until his death from pancreatic cancer
36785e56-068f-4cd8-a8db-65ab25da75f8_Joseph_J._Canno:3
[{"answer": "Europe", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "9239", "title": "Europe"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nJoseph Jenne Cannon (May 22, 1877 – November 5, 1945) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Europe. He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in St. Petersburg and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903. Lyman and Cannon", "id": "13710370" }, { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nalso similarly dedicated Finland in 1903. In the 1908 election, Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. He served one term, from 1909 to 1911. Cannon was not formally associated with any political party. From 1931 to 1934, Cannon was the editor of the \"Deseret News\", a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church. His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church's British Mission. Cannon served in this", "id": "13710371" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nSylvester Quayle Cannon (June 10, 1877 – May 29, 1943) was an American businessman, engineer, and religious leader who served as the sixth presiding bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1925 to 1938 and a member of church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1939 until his death. He was the son of George Q. Cannon, an apostle and member of the church's First Presidency. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. He studied", "id": "2194372" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nJohn Quayle Cannon (April 19, 1857 – January 14, 1931) was an editor-in-chief of the \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, Utah, and a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He also served as a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army during the Spanish–American War. He was the son of LDS Church apostle George Q. Cannon and Elizabeth Hoagland. He was married to Elizabeth \"Annie\" Wells Cannon. Cannon", "id": "7202721" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nFrank Jenne Cannon (January 25, 1859July 25, 1933) was the first United States Senator from Utah, who served from 1896 to 1899. Born in Salt Lake City, he was the eldest child of Sarah Jenne Cannon and George Q. Cannon. His father was an Apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and later was a member of its First Presidency. After attending the school in Salt Lake City, he studied at University of Deseret, graduating at the age of 19", "id": "11000345" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nEdwin Quayle \"Ted\" Cannon, Jr. (May 6, 1918 – April 6, 2005) was a Utah politician and businessman and was a prominent leader and missionary in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was among the first missionaries in the LDS Church to preach to black people in Africa and was part of the first group missionaries sent to establish official congregations of the LDS Church in West Africa. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Edwin Q. Cannon,", "id": "9582822" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Ivins Cannon (March 9, 1920 – August 4, 2009) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1986 to 1991. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, Cannon was the son of George J. Cannon and Lucy Grant Cannon, a leader of the youth in the LDS Church. His maternal grandfather was Heber J. Grant, the seventh president of the LDS Church. His paternal grandfather was Abraham H. Cannon, who was a member of the church", "id": "8339578" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nLucy Grant Cannon (October 22, 1880 – May 7, 1966) was the fourth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1937 to 1948. She was a member of the general presidency of the Young Women from 1923 to 1948, serving as a counselor to two presidents. Lucy Grant was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Lucy Stringham and LDS Church apostle Heber J. Grant. She served as a church missionary in the Western", "id": "1681853" }, { "contents": "George Mousley Cannon\n\n\nTrust Company. He served as a delegate to the 1895 Utah State Constitutional Convention and chaired the committee which formulated the articles on taxation and public debt. In 1896, Cannon was elected to the Utah State Senate and served as its first president. When The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) modified stake boundaries in 1900, dividing the new Granite Stake off from the Salt Lake Stake, Cannon became the Sunday School Superintendent of the new stake. From 1901 until after 1930, Cannon served as", "id": "8629874" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nat the University of Utah and then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received a B.S. degree in mining engineering. In 1899, Cannon began an LDS Church mission in Belgium. Cannon then served from 1900 to 1902 as president of the church's Netherlands–Belgium Mission. Cannon also served as Francis M. Lyman's secretary on a three-month trip to many nations along the Mediterranean and in the Middle East. From 1916 to 1925, Cannon served as president of the Pioneer Stake in Salt Lake City. In", "id": "2194373" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\nAbraham Hoagland Cannon (also reported as Abram H. Cannon) (March 12, 1859 – July 19, 1896) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. His parents were George Q. Cannon, a Latter Day Saints apostle, and Elizabeth Hoagland, daughter of Abraham Hoagland. Cannon studied at Deseret University. Later, he studied architecture under Obed Taylor. Cannon married Sarah A.", "id": "9035314" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nSr. and Luella Wareing. He was born at his parents' home because of the 1918 influenza pandemic. Cannon's paternal grandfather was George Q. Cannon, a Mormon pioneer and prominent leader in the LDS Church. Cannon was raised in Salt Lake City. In 1937, Cannon went on a mission for the LDS Church to Nazi Germany. He was president of a branch of the church in Berlin in 1939 when the LDS Church evacuated its missionaries from Europe at the beginning of World War II. Cannon finished his mission in", "id": "9582823" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\n. Callville was submerged when Lake Mead was filled. In 1869 and 1870, Cannon served a second mission in the Eastern United States. In April 1876, Cannon became president of the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. He served in this position until April 1, 1904. After his time as stake president, Cannon served as a patriarch in the church. Cannon was the mayor of St. George, Utah Territory in 1861 and 1862. In 1896, after Utah had become a U.S. state, he stood for election", "id": "7202652" }, { "contents": "Donald Q. Cannon\n\n\nDonald Quayle Cannon (born 1936) is a retired professor at Brigham Young University who specializes in Mormon history, particularly early Mormon history and international Mormon history. As a young man, Cannon was a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Germany. Cannon earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Utah. Cannon holds a Ph.D. from Clark University. In the late 1960s, he taught at the University of Southern Maine. In the LDS Church he has", "id": "10057919" }, { "contents": "George Goddard (Mormon)\n\n\nwas the clerk to LDS Church presiding bishop Edward Hunter. From 1874 to 1884, Goddard was the clerk of the LDS Church's biannual general conferences. In 1872, Goddard became the inaugural first assistant to George Q. Cannon, the first superintendent of the Deseret Sunday School Union. Goddard served in this capacity for 26 years, until his death in 1899. Goddard was also a member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and a patriarch in the church. He died in Salt Lake City and was buried at Salt Lake City Cemetery.", "id": "7701639" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nuntil their arrival in Utah. In 1854, Cannon went on a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to the Eastern United States, where he assisted John Taylor in publishing a periodical entitled \"The Mormon\". He also preached and baptized in Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware. Cannon returned to Utah Territory due to the troubles connected with the Utah War. In 1864, Cannon helped establish Call's Landing on the Colorado River, later known as Callville, Nevada", "id": "7202651" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nJanath Russell Cannon (October 28, 1918 – July 5, 2007) was a counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was also a prominent missionary in the church and was among the first to preach to black people in Africa. Born in Ogden, Utah, Janath Russell was educated at Wellesley College. In 1941, she married Edwin Q. Cannon in the Salt Lake Temple. From 1971 to 1974,", "id": "9582964" }, { "contents": "Joseph A. Cannon\n\n\nserved as an assistant administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from 1983 to 1985. Joseph A. Cannon was born on July 31, 1949. Cannon served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Ireland, including on the Isle of Man, the ancestral homeland of the Cannons. Cannon received a degree in political science and, in 1977, a law degree from Brigham Young University. Cannon served as a law clerk in Salt Lake City for U.S. District", "id": "7202830" }, { "contents": "Elaine A. Cannon\n\n\nElaine Anderson Cannon (April 9, 1922 – May 19, 2003) was the eighth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 to 1984. Cannon has been a writer and an editor and is the author of over 50 books. Elaine Anderson was born to Aldon Joseph and Minnie Egan Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a teenager, she started writing a daily column aimed at teenagers for the \"Deseret News\". She", "id": "1682052" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nAdele Morris Cannon Howells (January 11, 1886 – April 14, 1951) was the fourth general president of the Primary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1943 until her death of rheumatic heart disease. She contributed to \"The Children's Friend\" magazine, as well as the fundraising for the Children's Primary Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. Adele Morris Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to George Mousley Cannon and Marian Adelaide Morris. She", "id": "1336419" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\nGeorgius Young Cannon (March 6, 1892 – March 29, 1987) was a 20th-century architect in the American West who operated principally out of Salt Lake City, Utah. Cannon trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), graduating in 1918. He then joined the army and later returned to Utah to intern with the architectural firm Ware & Treganza and Cannon & Fetzer. He served two missions to Germany for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). For a time", "id": "12786285" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Quayle Cannon (January 11, 1827 – April 12, 1901) was an early member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), and served in the First Presidency under four successive presidents of the church: Brigham Young, John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. He was the church's chief political strategist, and was dubbed \"the Mormon premier\" and \"the Mormon Richelieu\" by the press. He was also a five", "id": "19825263" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nwas the oldest of nine children, and her father George Cannon was the first president of the Utah State Senate. As a child, Cannon suffered from rheumatic fever. She enjoyed reading in her spare time and horseback riding. She was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Cannon attended schools in Salt Lake City and graduated from the LDS High School and Business College in 1903. She attended the University of Utah and studied physical education and graduated with her bachelor's degree in 1909. Cannon", "id": "1336420" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nis one of the few general authorities of the LDS Church to have been excommunicated. From 1889 until 1892, Cannon was the editor of the \"Ogden Standard\". From October 1892 until April 1898, he was the editor in chief of the \"Deseret News\". After the Spanish–American War he returned to work at the \"Deseret News\" and served as an executive editor of the newspaper off-and-on until his death. He was much beloved by his co-workers. Cannon was a member", "id": "7202722" }, { "contents": "Tracy Y. Cannon\n\n\nLatter-day Saints. In 1939, he was made second assistant to Melvin J. Ballard, supervisor of the committee. From 1915 to 1927, Cannon was a member of the high council of the Pioneer Stake of the LDS Church. In 1917, he became a member of the Deseret Sunday School Union General Board. From 1930 through 1936, Cannon was bishop of the Cannon Ward in Salt Lake City. Cannon was an editor of the 1927 LDS Church hymnal. In 1925, Cannon was appointed director of the McCune School", "id": "12019030" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe church's Welsh-language periodical, \"Udgorn Seion\". From 1867 to 1874, Cannon was the managing editor of the \"Deseret News\". It was under his direction that the newspaper was first published on a daily basis. In 1866, Cannon began publication of a magazine for youth and young adult Latter-day Saints called \"The Juvenile Instructor\". He owned and published this magazine until his death; in 1901 his family sold the magazine to the LDS Church's Sunday School organization. The periodical was", "id": "19825272" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nCannon and her husband were heads of the Switzerland Mission of the LDS Church. Upon their return to Utah in 1974, Cannon became the first counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the church's Relief Society. Cannon served in this capacity until 1978, when she was released so that she and her husband could become the first missionaries of the church to preach in \"black Africa\". They — along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey — preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 27", "id": "9582965" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\nan LDS Church organization responsible for educating young members of the LDS church, and the magazine was the first church periodical oriented toward youth. Cannon opened the George Q. Cannon & Sons bookstore in 1867 to sell the magazine and other publications of an uplifting nature. Cannon believed that secular novels did not reflect Latter-day Saint values. In the 1880s, Cannon expanded with a branch in Ogden, Utah. It is not known how many books Cannon & Sons actually published itself. In this era, authors commonly self-published", "id": "18344085" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n. Cannon was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. Cannon fathered 32 children, some of whom are Abraham H. Cannon, John Q. Cannon, and Sylvester Q. Cannon, who all became general authorities of the LDS Church; Frank J. Cannon, Utah's first U.S. Senator; and Lewis T. Cannon and Georgius Y. Cannon, prominent architects in Utah. Some of Cannon's prominent descendants include Howard Cannon, U.S. Senator from Nevada from 1959 to 1983 and Chris Cannon, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1997 to", "id": "19825281" }, { "contents": "Salt Lake City Council Hall\n\n\nwho was then the official architect for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Built at First South and 120 East (more on Salt Lake City's coordinate system), sandstone for the structure was delivered from Red Butte Canyon on Utah's first chartered railroad. The well-furnished Greek revival building was completed at a cost of $70,000. In January 1866, City Hall was dedicated by George Q. Cannon, a prominent LDS leader. Many other LDS leaders attended the dedication including Brigham", "id": "19382830" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\n, Cannon moved to Los Angeles and worked as the office manager of his MIT schoolmate Wallace Neff. He later returned to Utah and designed numerous buildings, mostly residences, and some of which remain on the National Register of Historic Places. Among his works were meetinghouses of the LDS Church and other civic buildings. Cannon served on a church-appointed board of six architects that oversaw the construction of the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple. Cannon was the youngest of 32 children born to LDS Church leader George Q. Cannon. His mother,", "id": "12786286" }, { "contents": "Karl G. Maeser\n\n\nin the General Superintendency of the Deseret Sunday School Union. He was the Second Assistant to General Superintendent George Q. Cannon from July 1894 to January 1899. He then served as the First Assistant to Cannon from January 1899 until February 1901. Maeser also participated in the Utah constitutional convention after Abraham Smoot's death in 1895. He proposed an article to support prohibition, but later backed down. Missionaries from the LDS Church were removed from California in 1858 due to the Utah War. Missionary work resumed in 1892. Maeser presided over", "id": "11030473" }, { "contents": "Frank B. Woodbury\n\n\nFrank Bartlett Woodbury (December 27, 1867 – December 21, 1962) was a leader of and an Acting Presiding Patriarch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), one of only three church members to hold this position in church history. Born in St. George, Utah Territory, to Orin Nelson Woodbury and Ann Cannon, Woodbury served in many capacities in the church on a local level. Some, but not all, LDS Church sources list Woodbury as \"Acting Presiding Patriarch\" of", "id": "8238754" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand 1958 and served three full terms. From 1964 to 1971, Cannon was a bishop of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. From 1971 to 1974, he was the president of the Switzerland Mission of the church. In 1978, three weeks after the LDS Church announced that it would no longer impose restrictions of black people receiving the priesthood or participating in temple ordinances, Cannon traveled to Africa on behalf of the church with Merrill J. Bateman to assess the prospects for church missionary work and growth in \"black Africa\"", "id": "9582825" }, { "contents": "Amasa Lyman\n\n\n). Lyman served as the first mayor of San Bernardino. In 1860, Young appointed three of the twelve apostles—Lyman, Charles C. Rich, and George Q. Cannon—to the presidency of the church's European Mission. On March 16, 1862, Lyman preached a sermon in Dundee, Scotland, which all but denied the reality of and the necessity for the atonement of Jesus Christ, which is a central tenet of the LDS Church. His speech appeared to have been overlooked for years, but on January 21", "id": "12068047" }, { "contents": "Mark E. Petersen\n\n\nMark Edward Petersen (November 7, 1900 – January 11, 1984) was an American news editor and religious leader who served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1944 until his death. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, he filled the vacancy in the Quorum caused by the excommunication of Richard R. Lyman. Petersen had become managing editor of the church-owned \"Deseret News\" in 1935 and editor in 1941.", "id": "2692480" }, { "contents": "Thomas C. Griggs\n\n\nthe LDS Church's Aaronic priesthood; his call to this office was given by Apostle George Q. Cannon. With the outbreak of the American Civil War, the Griggs heeded the counsel of LDS Church leaders to move to Utah Territory. The Griggs crossed the plains in Joseph Horne's Mormon pioneer company in 1861. Griggs first joined the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in 1866 when Charles John Thomas was the director. Griggs would continue as a member of the choir until his death in 1903. While Robert Sands was the conductor of the choir", "id": "9481149" }, { "contents": "Charles Clarence Neslen\n\n\nfrom Germany and he was imprisoned in Danzig. He served as president of the Königsberg District of the LDS Church for a part of his mission. Neslen was a member of the Democratic Party and a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1912. Neslen worked a total of 15 years for the \"Deseret News\". He was also a realtor and for a time served as secretary of the Salt Lake Real Estate Association. On October 26, 1905, Neslen married Grace T. Cannon, a daughter of George Q. Cannon.", "id": "21092533" }, { "contents": "Stephen L. Chipman\n\n\nStephen L. Chipman (1864–1945) was a member of the Utah State Legislature in 1903 and a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Utah County. He was also the first president of the Salt Lake Temple who was not also an apostle in the LDS Church. Chipman studied at Brigham Young Academy (the predecessor of Brigham Young University (BYU)) as a youth. From 1885 to 1887 he served as a Mormon missionary in the Southern States Mission of the LDS Church", "id": "15228384" }, { "contents": "Mountain Meadows massacre and Mormon public relations\n\n\nCannon, then president of the LDS California Mission. In the October 13, 1857 edition of Cannon's San Francisco newspaper \"The Western Standard\", Cannon responded to initial news reports of involvement by Mormons by charging the responsible journalists with writing \"reckless and malignant slanders\", despite knowing that the southern Utah Mormons were \"as innocent of [the massacre] as the child unborn\". The church's official newspaper in Salt Lake City, \"The Deseret News\", was initially slow to comment on the massacre,", "id": "22212632" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas the second-most senior apostle of the church after the death of Woodruff, Cannon did not become President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, as would be the practice in the LDS Church today. Rather, because Cannon was a member of the First Presidency, the church simply appointed the next senior apostle of the church—Brigham Young, Jr.—to be the quorum president. (Under today's practices, Cannon would have been appointed the president of the quorum and Young would have been appointed acting president.) Cannon", "id": "19825274" }, { "contents": "Clifford E. Young\n\n\nClifford Earle Young (December 7, 1883 – August 21, 1958) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1941 until his death. Young was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, the son of LDS Church leader Seymour B. Young. From 1905 to 1908, he served as a Mormon missionary in England and Germany. In 1928, Young became the president of the Alpine Stake of the LDS Church in Utah. In 1934, he joined the", "id": "8315768" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n33. Upon his joining the Quorum of the Twelve, Cannon was called to preside over the church's European Mission. Cannon's mission in Europe ended when he was recalled by Young in 1862 to work in Washington, D.C., to assist in the church's promotion of Utah Territory's bid for statehood. At the adjournment of the 1862 congressional session, Cannon again left for Europe to preside over the mission. In this capacity, Cannon was the editor of the \"Millennial Star\" and, for a short time,", "id": "19825271" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nfrom the federal authorities. In September 1888, Cannon surrendered himself and pleaded guilty at trial to charges of unlawful cohabitation under the Edmunds Act. As a result, Cannon served nearly six months in Utah's federal penitentiary. Cannon was pardoned in 1894 by U.S. President Grover Cleveland. Cannon died on April 12, 1901, in Monterey, California, at 74 years of age. Had he lived a few months longer, he would have become the President of the LDS Church: Lorenzo Snow died on October 10 of that year", "id": "19825280" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Isle of Man\n\n\nand Idaho which descends from the 19th century marriage of George Cannon and Ann Quayle before their emigration from Peel, Isle of Man. The family's most notable member was their oldest son George Quayle Cannon. The family is connected by marriage to the Bennion, Taylor, Wells and Young political families. LDS Membership statistics as of January 1, 2011 for the Isle of Man. The nation of the Isle of Man does not have its own mission. Instead it is served by an English mission. Five out of the six", "id": "7797107" }, { "contents": "The Contributor (LDS magazine)\n\n\nThe Contributor was an independent publication associated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) between 1879 and 1896. It was a monthly periodical and sought to represent the Young Men's and Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Associations (YMMIA and YLMIA respectively), the youth organizations of the LDS Church at the time. It was founded by Junius F. Wells, the inaugural head of the YMMIA. Abraham H. Cannon became editor when the magazine was purchased by the Cannon Publishing Company in 1892. With the", "id": "505110" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe official organ of the Sunday School until 1930, when it was replaced with \"The Instructor\". Cannon also served as the first general superintendent of the church's Sunday School from 1867 until his death. On April 8, 1873, Cannon became a member of the church's First Presidency when he was called as the first counselor by Brigham Young. Cannon went on to serve as counselor to three more presidents of the church: he was First Counselor to John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. Although Cannon", "id": "19825273" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\ntogether. Prior to her service in the general Primary presidency, Clara Cannon was a counselor in the presidencies of the Primary and Relief Society in the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. When Louie B. Felt became the first general presidency of the Primary, Matilda M. Barratt and Cannon were selected as Felt's counselors. Cannon was a counselor until 1895; the next year she was succeeded in the position by Josephine R. West. Clara Moses Cannon died of throat cancer in Centerville, Utah, aged 87 and was interred in", "id": "10663424" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nScouts of America and served in the organization's Great Salt Lake Council. Prior to his call as a general authority, Cannon served in the church as a bishop, stake president, patriarch, temple sealer, and regional representative. He was also the president of the church's Central British Mission from 1966 to 1969. From 1969 to 1972, Cannon was an assistant and counselor to W. Jay Eldredge, the general superintendent of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association. Cannon became a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy", "id": "8339580" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe Nauvoo Legion. During this time, Cannon served as printer of the \"Deseret News\" while it was publishing in exile in Fillmore, Utah. After the Utah War, he was called as president of the church's Eastern States Mission. The murder of Parley P. Pratt in 1857 created a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. That vacancy was not filled until Brigham Young called Cannon to the apostleship three years later. Cannon was ordained to the priesthood office of apostle on August 26, 1860, at age", "id": "19825270" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nin the Sandwich Islands (later known as the Kingdom of Hawaii), where he served for four years. While in the islands, Cannon converted many Native Hawaiians. One of the most notable was Jonatana Napela, who assisted Cannon in translating the Book of Mormon into Hawaiian. Joseph F. Smith, a future church president, would follow Cannon and serve in Hawaii one year later. Returning to Utah Territory, Cannon married Elizabeth Hoagland (daughter of Abraham Hoagland and his wife.) He was almost immediately called to assist apostle", "id": "19825268" }, { "contents": "Ronald E. Poelman\n\n\nRonald Eugene Poelman (May 10, 1928 – November 19, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 until his death. In 1984, he delivered a controversial sermon in the LDS Church's general conference which the church redacted before publishing. Poelman was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to a Latter-day Saint family. As a young man, he served as a Mormon missionary in the LDS Church's Netherlands Mission. He began his", "id": "4765396" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\n. He would marry Martha Brown of Ogden in 1878. In 1891 he helped to organize the Utah Republican Party. After a failed bid to become delegate from the Utah Territory, he succeeded and served from March 4, 1895, to January 4, 1896. Cannon was chosen in 1896 to serve as senator by the Utah Legislature in spite of LDS church leadership favoring his father for the job. He served in the United States Senate, initially, as a member of the Republican Party; however, he later became a", "id": "11000346" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nmember of the Silver Republican Party, founded by his successor (and future employer at \"The Salt Lake Tribune\") Thomas Kearns. Cannon lost re-election in 1899. Utah's state legislators indicated they would not support Cannon for re-election shortly after the November 1898 elections. Cannon had voted against the Dingley Act, which would have raised tariffs on sugar and helped the Utah sugar industry. It was strongly supported by the LDS Church hierarchy, who now opposed his re-election. Other factors were his support", "id": "11000347" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand Ghana. The first convert baptized in Africa was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and his wife were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' centre in Nauvoo, Illinois. For three months in 1989, Cannon was the interim president of the LDS Church's Germany Hamburg Mission; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. After his interim service as mission president, Cannon was the second president of the Frankfurt Germany Temple from 1989 to", "id": "9582827" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nCounselor to William B. Preston, the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church; he served in this position between 1884 and 1886. In 1884, shortly after Cannon had become a general authority, a sensationalized news story by Joseph Lippman in the \"Salt Lake Tribune\" alleged that Cannon had taken his wife's sister Louie Wells as a plural wife. Lippman suggested that Cannon and Wells had been married in the Logan Temple. In fact, there had been no such marriage, though it was later revealed that Cannon and Wells had", "id": "7202724" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nbranches of the LDS Church in Nigeria and Ghana. The first convert baptized in Nigeria was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and her husband were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' center in Nauvoo, Illinois. In 1989, they served as interim leaders of the Germany Hamburg Mission of the church; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. From 1989 to 1992, Cannon was the matron of the Frankfurt Germany Temple while her husband", "id": "9582966" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\n's Quorum of the Twelve. Abraham was a son of George Q. Cannon, an early member of the church's First Presidency. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary in the church's Central States Mission. After his mission, he served in the United States Air Force during the Second World War. In 1946, he began attending Brigham Young University (BYU). After graduating from BYU, Cannon became a vice president of Beneficial Life Insurance Company in Salt Lake City. He was active in the Boy", "id": "8339579" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\n1925, Cannon became the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church, succeeding Charles W. Nibley. Cannon's counselors were David A. Smith and John Wells. In 1938, Cannon was released as Presiding Bishop and was succeeded by LeGrand Richards. At the same time, Cannon was ordained an apostle and made an \"associate\" of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, a unique position that had never been filled before. When Quorum member Melvin J. Ballard died the next year, Cannon became a full member of the Quorum; he served", "id": "2194374" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\nClarissa Cordelia (\"Clara\") Moses Cannon (April 21, 1839 – August 21, 1926) was a Mormon pioneer and a member of the first-ever general presidency of the Primary organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). She was the second counselor to general president Louie B. Felt from 1880 to 1895. Clara Moses was born in Westfield, Massachusetts. In 1846 she took the six-month journey on the ship \"Brooklyn\" from New York City to San", "id": "10663422" }, { "contents": "Leonora Cannon Taylor\n\n\nLeonora Cannon Taylor (October 6, 1796–December 9, 1868) was a member of the Relief Society organization at the time of its origin and the first wife of John Taylor, the third president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). On October 6, 1796 in Peel, Isle of Man, Leonora Cannon was born to George Cannon and Leonora Callister. As the oldest daughter in the family, when Leonora's father died when she was thirteen she went away to London to work", "id": "16190675" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\ntheir books, which were then distributed by others. However, Cannon & Sons distributed several important books through their stores and mail order (see table). The company had extensive ties to the LDS Church-owned newspaper, the \"Deseret News.\" Five of Cannon's sons held important positions in the paper, and Cannon himself was editor between 1867 and 1872, and again while temporarily owning the paper from 1892 to 1898. Nearly every George Q. Cannon & Sons book was printed on the \"Deseret News\" press", "id": "18344086" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nof the Utah Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Cannon was the oldest son of George Q. Cannon and the one most expected to follow in his prominent father's footsteps in politics, church office, and journalism. Heber J. Grant once said of Cannon: \"There probably is not a young man in the church who had had more opportunities and advantages extended to him educationally, spiritually, and every other way than John Q. Cannon.\" At the age of 27, Cannon was called to serve as the Second", "id": "7202723" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nMartha Maria \"Mattie\" Hughes Cannon (July 1, 1857 – July 10, 1932) was a Welsh-born immigrant to the United States, a polygamous wife, physician, Utah women's rights advocate and suffragist, and Utah State Senator. Her family immigrated to the United States as converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and traveled West to settle in Utah territory with other Mormons. She started working at the age of fourteen. At sixteen she enrolled in the University", "id": "15993465" }, { "contents": "Church Office Building\n\n\nThe Church Office Building is a 28-story building in Salt Lake City, Utah, which houses the administrative support staff for the lay ministry of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) throughout the world. The building is 420 ft (128 m) tall at roof level and is located within the Temple Square complex on the corner of North Temple and State Street. The building was designed by George Cannon Young at a cost of US$31 million to build. Construction took place from 1962 to 1972", "id": "13754819" }, { "contents": "John Lyman Smith\n\n\nJohn Lyman Smith (November 17, 1828 – February 21, 1898) was an American politician and Mormon missionary. He served as a member of the Utah Territory's Legislative Assembly's House of Representatives for Iron County, Utah, from 1852 to 1853, and the Great Salt Lake County, Utah, from 1853 to 1855. Cousin of the founder of the Latter Day Saint Movement, Joseph Smith, Smith was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) who traveled to the", "id": "18219861" }, { "contents": "Francis M. Lyman\n\n\nFrancis Marion Lyman (January 12, 1840 – November 18, 1916) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was the President of the Quorum from 1903 until his death. Lyman's father and son were also apostles in the church: his father was Amasa M. Lyman and his son was Richard R. Lyman. Both his father and son were excommunicated from the church while serving as apostles. Francis M. Lyman was born as", "id": "20761093" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nAngus Munn Cannon (May 17, 1834 – June 7, 1915) was an early Latter Day Saint leader and Mormon pioneer. Cannon was born in Liverpool, Lancashire, England. His Manx parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 1840, being baptized by his uncle John Taylor. In 1842, the Cannon family went to Nauvoo, Illinois, United States. By 1849, they were in Utah Territory. Cannon was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon and their lives followed very similar paths up", "id": "7202650" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\naffairs while Taylor recovered. This training would serve him well in later life. Cannon's father died in 1845. In 1846, Taylor traveled to England to organize the affairs of the church after Smith's death. Meanwhile, Cannon accompanied Taylor's wife and family as they moved to Winter Quarters, Nebraska. When Taylor returned, Cannon traveled with the entire Taylor family to the Salt Lake Valley, arriving in October 1847. In 1849, Cannon was asked by church president Brigham Young to serve as a missionary for the church", "id": "19825267" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nstaying in the position until December 31, 1903. Cannon attempted to prohibit children not vaccinated from attending school in case of a disease outbreak. The Board of Health sent out vaccines; however, the \"Deseret News\" spread information that vaccines weren't safe. LDS Church leaders were divided on the subject. One apostle, Brigham Young Jr. was very vocal in his opinions, writing in the \"Deseret News\" about the evils of vaccinations. The influence of the \"Deseret News\" and Mormon religious leaders limited how many", "id": "15993490" }, { "contents": "Billy Johnson (Mormon)\n\n\nLDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball announced Official Declaration 2 which extended the priesthood to all worthy male members of the church regardless of race or color. In gratitude, Johnson sent a letter to Kimball, explaining that God had prepared the people in Ghana, asking him to send missionaries to the members. Kimball responded to his pleas and sent the first called missionaries Rendell N. Mabey and Rachel Mabey. They joined Edwin Q. Cannon and Janath R. Cannon. Johnson was finally baptized into the LDS Church on December 9, 1978. He", "id": "4108521" }, { "contents": "Juvenile Instructor\n\n\ncatechisms on the Bible, Book of Mormon, and Doctrine and Covenants; musical compositions; illustrations; stories; editorial teachings; and other aids to gospel instruction. It was the first magazine for children published in the United States west of the Mississippi River. For much of its history, \"The Juvenile Instructor\" was owned by the Cannon family. Its first editor was George Q. Cannon, an apostle in the LDS Church. Cannon and his family continued to publish the magazine privately until January 1, 1901, when the", "id": "9210614" }, { "contents": "Joseph F. Smith\n\n\nand as second counselor to Lorenzo Snow (1898–1901). Smith was appointed first counselor to Snow on the death of first counselor George Q. Cannon, but, as Snow himself died only four days later, Smith never served in that position. He succeeded Snow as president of the LDS Church and president of the Salt Lake Temple. He served as president of the temple until 1911, when he transferred the responsibility to Anthon H. Lund. Smith also served as editor of the \"Improvement Era\" and \"Juvenile Instructor\",", "id": "4117444" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in California\n\n\nQ. Cannon began publication in San Francisco of the \"Western Standard\", a weekly periodical supportive of the Church. The first colonization from Utah to California came in 1851 when a company of about 450 saints and slaves under direction of Elders Amasa M. Lyman and Charles C. Rich of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles settled at what is now San Bernardino. The colony was the final settlement in a string of Mormon communities extending from Salt Lake City in an area known as Deseret. The community thrived, and on July 6,", "id": "22187256" }, { "contents": "Sunday School (LDS Church)\n\n\nout. On November 11, 1867, Young and church leaders Daniel H. Wells, George A. Smith, Wilford Woodruff, George Q. Cannon, and Brigham Young, Jr. met and organized the Parent Sunday School Union. Young appointed Cannon as the first general superintendent of the Sunday School, a position he would hold until his death in 1901. In 1872, the Sunday School organization was renamed the Deseret Sunday School Union. The organized Sunday School addressed lesson topics and source materials, grading, prizes and rewards, use of hymns", "id": "8671425" }, { "contents": "Hugh W. Pinnock\n\n\nHugh Wallace Pinnock (January 15, 1934 – December 16, 2000) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Pinnock was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Western States Mission. Pinnock graduated from University of Utah in 1958, where he became a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity and Owl and Key. Prior to his call to the First", "id": "8519001" }, { "contents": "Charles W. Penrose\n\n\nwas organized Penrose was called as a member of the high council. In 1877, Penrose became the assistant editor of the LDS Church-owned \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, working under George Q. Cannon. Penrose was known for his writing, including missionary tracts and lyrics of Latter-day Saint hymns, including \"God of Our Fathers\", \"O Ye Mountains High\", and \"Up, Awake, Ye Defenders of Zion\". In 1880, Penrose became the editor-in-chief of", "id": "2194239" }, { "contents": "Rulon S. Wells\n\n\nRulon Seymour Wells (July 7, 1854 – May 7, 1941) was a Utah politician and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1893 until his death. Wells was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to LDS Church leader Daniel H. Wells (1814–1891) and Louisa Free (1824–1886). In 1875, Wells travelled to Europe as a Mormon missionary and worked primarily in Germany and Switzerland. He returned to the United States in 1877. On", "id": "8315459" }, { "contents": "G. Homer Durham\n\n\nGeorge Homer Durham (February 4, 1911 – January 10, 1985) was an American academic administrator and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Durham was born in Parowan, Utah, and was raised in Salt Lake City. As a boy in grade school, he met and became lifelong friends with future LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley. As a young man, Durham served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the British", "id": "21588256" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nJonatana Napela or Jonathan Hawaii Napela (first name also spelled Iohatana, full name Napelakapuonamahanaonaleleonalani) (September 11, 1813 – August 6, 1879) was one of the earliest Hawaiian converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Hawaii, joining in the 1830s. He helped translate the Book of Mormon into the Hawaiian language, as \"Ka Buke a Moramona,\" working with missionary George Q. Cannon. Napela was appointed to serve as a superintendent of the colony at Kalaupapa, Molokai", "id": "16647246" }, { "contents": "Richfield, Utah\n\n\nserves about 600 students per year. As in most settled areas of rural Utah, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) plays a prominent role. The Mormons were highly industrious colonizers. From 1847, when they founded Salt Lake City, until 1877, they founded 360 towns. Following direction from Brigham Young, Latter-day Saints founded the town and outlying hamlets about 150 years ago. Members of the LDS Church are predominant among the residents. Even in this heart of Mormon country,", "id": "11082836" }, { "contents": "Marvin O. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Owen Ashton (April 8, 1883 – October 7, 1946) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1938 until his death. Prior to becoming a general authority, Ashton was a prominent local leader of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City, Utah. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Mormon parents. He married Rachel Grace Jeremy in 1906 and in 1907 went to England as a missionary for the LDS Church. He returned", "id": "14505232" }, { "contents": "LeGrand Richards\n\n\nLeGrand Richards (February 6, 1886 – January 11, 1983) was a prominent missionary and leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He served as the seventh presiding bishop of the LDS Church from 1938 to 1952, and was then called as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles by church president David O. McKay. Richards served in the Quorum of the Twelve until his death in Salt Lake City, Utah, at the age of 96. Richards was born in", "id": "2294374" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nwas educated at Lahainaluna School. Napela was trained as a lawyer. He was serving as a judge in Wailuku, Hawaii, when he met American George Q. Cannon, a member of the LDS Church on a missionary trip to Hawaii. After Napela's conversion in the 1830s to the LDS Church, the government forced the judge to resign from his position. The LDS Church was regarded with suspicion. LDS Church historian Andrew Jensen said that Napela \"did splendid missionary work for the Church.\" Napela was sent on a specific", "id": "16647248" }, { "contents": "Gardo House\n\n\ncounselor George Q. Cannon and other church leaders suggested that Taylor occupy the Gardo House after its completion, but he repeatedly refused. However, when church members unanimously voted on April 9, 1879, to make the Gardo House the official parsonage for LDS Church presidents, Taylor reluctantly accepted their decision. Moses Thatcher, William Jennings, and Angus M. Cannon were appointed as a committee to oversee completion of the mansion. On December 27, 1881, the Deseret News published a letter from John Taylor announcing a public reception and tour of", "id": "1496184" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nStates Mission of the church in 1901. In 1902, Grant married George J. Cannon. In 1923, Cannon was asked to succeed Mae Taylor Nystrom as the second counselor to Martha Horne Tingey, the general president of what was then called the Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Association. In 1929, when Ruth May Fox succeeded Tingey, Cannon was asked to be her first counselor. Cannon served in this capacity until 1929, when Fox was released and Cannon was selected by her father, who was President of the Church, to", "id": "1681854" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\n. (At the time, Cannon was a counselor to James E. Faust in the church's International Mission, which had jurisdiction over all areas of the world not otherwise part of a mission.) After Bateman and Cannon reported the results of their trip, Cannon and his wife were called and set apart as the first Mormon missionaries to black Africa. They—along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey—preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 35 branches and 5 districts of the LDS Church in Nigeria", "id": "9582826" }, { "contents": "Marion D. Hanks\n\n\nMarion Duff Hanks (October 13, 1921 – August 5, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1953 until his death. Hanks was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man he served in the Northern States Mission of the LDS Church, which was headquartered in Chicago. He was in the United States Navy during World War II and received a J.D. from the University of Utah. Prior to his call as a general authority", "id": "6558935" }, { "contents": "Lillie T. Freeze\n\n\nthe Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association (YLMIA). In this capacity, she was invited to speak at the Salt Lake Tabernacle on April 6, 1880, at a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the LDS Church's founding. In 1880, Lillie Freeze was one of the founding members of the LDS Church's Primary Association. Freeze was appointed as the first secretary of the general presidency, which was composed of Louie B. Felt, Matilda M. Barratt, and Clara C. M. Cannon. Freeze was secretary until 1888, when", "id": "10906695" }, { "contents": "Henry D. Taylor\n\n\nHenry Dixon Taylor (November 22, 1903 – February 24, 1987) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1958 until his death. Taylor was born in Provo, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Eastern States Mission. During his mission, Taylor was the president of the church's Connecticut District. Taylor received a bachelor's degree from Brigham Young University (BYU) and a master's degree", "id": "2477100" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas elected to be the non-voting delegate for Utah Territory in the United States Congress in 1872. He remained a congressional delegate until 1882, when his seat was declared vacant by the enactment of the Edmunds Act, which terminated many political and civil rights for Utah's Mormon polygamists. By 1880, Cannon had served four terms in Congress as Territorial Delegate. The newly appointed anti-Mormon territorial governor, Eli Houston Murray, openly supported the Liberal Party, which generally opposed church candidates. The 1880 territory-wide election", "id": "19825275" }, { "contents": "George F. Richards\n\n\nGeorge Franklin Richards (February 23, 1861 – August 8, 1950) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from April 9, 1906 until his death. He also served as Acting Presiding Patriarch of the LDS Church from 1937 to 1942 and President of the Quorum of the Twelve from May 25, 1945 until his death. Richards was born in Farmington, Utah Territory, the son of Franklin D. Richards and Nanny Longstroth. Richards", "id": "2194252" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\n1882, at the age of 23, Cannon assumed business control of the \"Juvenile Instructor\" and associated publications. He continued his management until his death. In October 1892, Cannon and his brother John Q. Cannon took control of the \"Deseret News\" publishing. He also became the editor and publisher of \"The Contributor\". On October 9, 1882, Cannon became a member of the First Seven Presidents of the Seventy of the church. On October 7, 1889, church president Wilford Woodruff named Cannon a member", "id": "9035316" }, { "contents": "Howard Cannon\n\n\nHis grandfather David Cannon, was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon, and a leading figure in the building of the St. George Temple, who was later the third president of that temple. His father Walter Cannon was one of David Cannon's 31 children. Howard's parents had married in 1909, his mother was Leah Sullivan. When Cannon was two years old his father left for England to served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for two years. Cannon went to Woodward School in", "id": "18060013" }, { "contents": "Mormon fiction\n\n\nMormons were generally non-fiction, including scripture, missionary tracts, and doctrinal literature. In 1844, Parley P. Pratt published what is commonly cited as the first work of LDS fiction, the didactic \"Dialogue between Joseph Smith and the Devil\". It was first published in the New York Herald. Early Mormon leaders like Brigham Young and George Q. Cannon condemned novels for wasting time, a rhetoric that persisted until the 1880s. Fiction among LDS Church members developed once the Mormons had settled in Utah and developed a degree of", "id": "453087" }, { "contents": "Marvin J. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Jeremy Ashton (May 6, 1915 – February 25, 1994) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1971 until his death. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was the son of Marvin O. Ashton, a local LDS leader, who later became a church general authority. The younger Ashton worked in the lumber business as a youth. He graduated from the University of Utah. He served a", "id": "19825413" }, { "contents": "Rudger Clawson\n\n\nRudger Judd Clawson (March 12, 1857 – June 21, 1943) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1898 until his death in 1943. He also served as President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1921 until his death and as a member of the First Presidency of the LDS Church for five days in 1901. Clawson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to Hiram Bradley Clawson and Margaret Judd", "id": "9035430" }, { "contents": "Utah-Idaho Sugar Company\n\n\npayment and a $130,000 loan. Cutler also went to Chicago and New York City to secure loans from banks; he came back, via train, with a bag full of money, as he did not think any banks in Utah could have cashed the large bank draft. The LDS church made more payments and secured more loans. In addition, George Q. Cannon and Heber J. Grant personally funded the enterprise. Joseph F. Smith, president of the LDS Church, gave a sermon in 1893 explaining that this was done to", "id": "1319991" }, { "contents": "President of the Church (LDS Church)\n\n\nthe President of the Quorum. When Woodruff died, his counselors returned to the Quorum based on the date they were ordained an apostle, placing George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith below Brigham Young Jr. and John Willard Young. Heber J. Grant objected to that arguing that seniority should be based on ordination to the Quorum rather than ordination as an apostle. Young argued that an apostle should not be demoted as long as he is worthy of the position. On March 31, 1900, Snow met with his counselors, Cannon and", "id": "16343191" }, { "contents": "Alfred W. McCune\n\n\n. Judge Orlando Powers, Associate Justice of the Utah Supreme Court, said in 1906 that he understood that McCune was not a Mormon. Frank J. Cannon, too, claimed McCune was not a Mormon, and B. H. Roberts, LDS Church historian and member of the First Council of the Seventy, said in 1930 that McCune was not a church member. Historian Orvin Malmquist, however, says that church records show he was baptized into the LDS Church at the age of eight in 1857, and that his marriage to Elizabeth", "id": "15062757" } ]
Joseph Jenne Cannon ( May 22 , 1877 -- November 5 , 1945 ) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ( LDS Church ) . He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family . As a young man , Cannon served as a for the LDS Church in Europe . He accompanied LDS Church [START_ENT] apostle [END_ENT] Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903 . Lyman and Cannon also similarly dedicated Finland in 1903 . In the 1908 election , Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from . He served one term , from 1909 to 1911 . Cannon was not formally associated with any political party . From 1931 to 1934 , Cannon was the editor of the Deseret News , a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church . His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church 's British Mission . Cannon served in this capacity for three years , until 1937 . Immediately following his return to Utah , Cannon was asked to become the first assistant to George Q. Morris , the general superintendent of the church 's . Cannon served in this capacity until his death from pancreatic cancer
a9988a6c-21a7-419f-9a3d-a16e63a5c111_Joseph_J._Canno:4
[{"answer": "Apostle (Latter Day Saints)", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "363753", "title": "Apostle (Latter Day Saints)"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nJoseph Jenne Cannon (May 22, 1877 – November 5, 1945) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Europe. He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in St. Petersburg and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903. Lyman and Cannon", "id": "13710370" }, { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nalso similarly dedicated Finland in 1903. In the 1908 election, Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. He served one term, from 1909 to 1911. Cannon was not formally associated with any political party. From 1931 to 1934, Cannon was the editor of the \"Deseret News\", a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church. His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church's British Mission. Cannon served in this", "id": "13710371" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nSylvester Quayle Cannon (June 10, 1877 – May 29, 1943) was an American businessman, engineer, and religious leader who served as the sixth presiding bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1925 to 1938 and a member of church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1939 until his death. He was the son of George Q. Cannon, an apostle and member of the church's First Presidency. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. He studied", "id": "2194372" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nJohn Quayle Cannon (April 19, 1857 – January 14, 1931) was an editor-in-chief of the \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, Utah, and a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He also served as a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army during the Spanish–American War. He was the son of LDS Church apostle George Q. Cannon and Elizabeth Hoagland. He was married to Elizabeth \"Annie\" Wells Cannon. Cannon", "id": "7202721" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nFrank Jenne Cannon (January 25, 1859July 25, 1933) was the first United States Senator from Utah, who served from 1896 to 1899. Born in Salt Lake City, he was the eldest child of Sarah Jenne Cannon and George Q. Cannon. His father was an Apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and later was a member of its First Presidency. After attending the school in Salt Lake City, he studied at University of Deseret, graduating at the age of 19", "id": "11000345" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nEdwin Quayle \"Ted\" Cannon, Jr. (May 6, 1918 – April 6, 2005) was a Utah politician and businessman and was a prominent leader and missionary in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was among the first missionaries in the LDS Church to preach to black people in Africa and was part of the first group missionaries sent to establish official congregations of the LDS Church in West Africa. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Edwin Q. Cannon,", "id": "9582822" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Ivins Cannon (March 9, 1920 – August 4, 2009) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1986 to 1991. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, Cannon was the son of George J. Cannon and Lucy Grant Cannon, a leader of the youth in the LDS Church. His maternal grandfather was Heber J. Grant, the seventh president of the LDS Church. His paternal grandfather was Abraham H. Cannon, who was a member of the church", "id": "8339578" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nLucy Grant Cannon (October 22, 1880 – May 7, 1966) was the fourth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1937 to 1948. She was a member of the general presidency of the Young Women from 1923 to 1948, serving as a counselor to two presidents. Lucy Grant was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Lucy Stringham and LDS Church apostle Heber J. Grant. She served as a church missionary in the Western", "id": "1681853" }, { "contents": "George Mousley Cannon\n\n\nTrust Company. He served as a delegate to the 1895 Utah State Constitutional Convention and chaired the committee which formulated the articles on taxation and public debt. In 1896, Cannon was elected to the Utah State Senate and served as its first president. When The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) modified stake boundaries in 1900, dividing the new Granite Stake off from the Salt Lake Stake, Cannon became the Sunday School Superintendent of the new stake. From 1901 until after 1930, Cannon served as", "id": "8629874" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nat the University of Utah and then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received a B.S. degree in mining engineering. In 1899, Cannon began an LDS Church mission in Belgium. Cannon then served from 1900 to 1902 as president of the church's Netherlands–Belgium Mission. Cannon also served as Francis M. Lyman's secretary on a three-month trip to many nations along the Mediterranean and in the Middle East. From 1916 to 1925, Cannon served as president of the Pioneer Stake in Salt Lake City. In", "id": "2194373" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\nAbraham Hoagland Cannon (also reported as Abram H. Cannon) (March 12, 1859 – July 19, 1896) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. His parents were George Q. Cannon, a Latter Day Saints apostle, and Elizabeth Hoagland, daughter of Abraham Hoagland. Cannon studied at Deseret University. Later, he studied architecture under Obed Taylor. Cannon married Sarah A.", "id": "9035314" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nSr. and Luella Wareing. He was born at his parents' home because of the 1918 influenza pandemic. Cannon's paternal grandfather was George Q. Cannon, a Mormon pioneer and prominent leader in the LDS Church. Cannon was raised in Salt Lake City. In 1937, Cannon went on a mission for the LDS Church to Nazi Germany. He was president of a branch of the church in Berlin in 1939 when the LDS Church evacuated its missionaries from Europe at the beginning of World War II. Cannon finished his mission in", "id": "9582823" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\n. Callville was submerged when Lake Mead was filled. In 1869 and 1870, Cannon served a second mission in the Eastern United States. In April 1876, Cannon became president of the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. He served in this position until April 1, 1904. After his time as stake president, Cannon served as a patriarch in the church. Cannon was the mayor of St. George, Utah Territory in 1861 and 1862. In 1896, after Utah had become a U.S. state, he stood for election", "id": "7202652" }, { "contents": "Donald Q. Cannon\n\n\nDonald Quayle Cannon (born 1936) is a retired professor at Brigham Young University who specializes in Mormon history, particularly early Mormon history and international Mormon history. As a young man, Cannon was a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Germany. Cannon earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Utah. Cannon holds a Ph.D. from Clark University. In the late 1960s, he taught at the University of Southern Maine. In the LDS Church he has", "id": "10057919" }, { "contents": "George Goddard (Mormon)\n\n\nwas the clerk to LDS Church presiding bishop Edward Hunter. From 1874 to 1884, Goddard was the clerk of the LDS Church's biannual general conferences. In 1872, Goddard became the inaugural first assistant to George Q. Cannon, the first superintendent of the Deseret Sunday School Union. Goddard served in this capacity for 26 years, until his death in 1899. Goddard was also a member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and a patriarch in the church. He died in Salt Lake City and was buried at Salt Lake City Cemetery.", "id": "7701639" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nuntil their arrival in Utah. In 1854, Cannon went on a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to the Eastern United States, where he assisted John Taylor in publishing a periodical entitled \"The Mormon\". He also preached and baptized in Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware. Cannon returned to Utah Territory due to the troubles connected with the Utah War. In 1864, Cannon helped establish Call's Landing on the Colorado River, later known as Callville, Nevada", "id": "7202651" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nJanath Russell Cannon (October 28, 1918 – July 5, 2007) was a counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was also a prominent missionary in the church and was among the first to preach to black people in Africa. Born in Ogden, Utah, Janath Russell was educated at Wellesley College. In 1941, she married Edwin Q. Cannon in the Salt Lake Temple. From 1971 to 1974,", "id": "9582964" }, { "contents": "Joseph A. Cannon\n\n\nserved as an assistant administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from 1983 to 1985. Joseph A. Cannon was born on July 31, 1949. Cannon served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Ireland, including on the Isle of Man, the ancestral homeland of the Cannons. Cannon received a degree in political science and, in 1977, a law degree from Brigham Young University. Cannon served as a law clerk in Salt Lake City for U.S. District", "id": "7202830" }, { "contents": "Elaine A. Cannon\n\n\nElaine Anderson Cannon (April 9, 1922 – May 19, 2003) was the eighth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 to 1984. Cannon has been a writer and an editor and is the author of over 50 books. Elaine Anderson was born to Aldon Joseph and Minnie Egan Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a teenager, she started writing a daily column aimed at teenagers for the \"Deseret News\". She", "id": "1682052" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nAdele Morris Cannon Howells (January 11, 1886 – April 14, 1951) was the fourth general president of the Primary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1943 until her death of rheumatic heart disease. She contributed to \"The Children's Friend\" magazine, as well as the fundraising for the Children's Primary Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. Adele Morris Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to George Mousley Cannon and Marian Adelaide Morris. She", "id": "1336419" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\nGeorgius Young Cannon (March 6, 1892 – March 29, 1987) was a 20th-century architect in the American West who operated principally out of Salt Lake City, Utah. Cannon trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), graduating in 1918. He then joined the army and later returned to Utah to intern with the architectural firm Ware & Treganza and Cannon & Fetzer. He served two missions to Germany for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). For a time", "id": "12786285" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Quayle Cannon (January 11, 1827 – April 12, 1901) was an early member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), and served in the First Presidency under four successive presidents of the church: Brigham Young, John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. He was the church's chief political strategist, and was dubbed \"the Mormon premier\" and \"the Mormon Richelieu\" by the press. He was also a five", "id": "19825263" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nwas the oldest of nine children, and her father George Cannon was the first president of the Utah State Senate. As a child, Cannon suffered from rheumatic fever. She enjoyed reading in her spare time and horseback riding. She was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Cannon attended schools in Salt Lake City and graduated from the LDS High School and Business College in 1903. She attended the University of Utah and studied physical education and graduated with her bachelor's degree in 1909. Cannon", "id": "1336420" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nis one of the few general authorities of the LDS Church to have been excommunicated. From 1889 until 1892, Cannon was the editor of the \"Ogden Standard\". From October 1892 until April 1898, he was the editor in chief of the \"Deseret News\". After the Spanish–American War he returned to work at the \"Deseret News\" and served as an executive editor of the newspaper off-and-on until his death. He was much beloved by his co-workers. Cannon was a member", "id": "7202722" }, { "contents": "Tracy Y. Cannon\n\n\nLatter-day Saints. In 1939, he was made second assistant to Melvin J. Ballard, supervisor of the committee. From 1915 to 1927, Cannon was a member of the high council of the Pioneer Stake of the LDS Church. In 1917, he became a member of the Deseret Sunday School Union General Board. From 1930 through 1936, Cannon was bishop of the Cannon Ward in Salt Lake City. Cannon was an editor of the 1927 LDS Church hymnal. In 1925, Cannon was appointed director of the McCune School", "id": "12019030" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe church's Welsh-language periodical, \"Udgorn Seion\". From 1867 to 1874, Cannon was the managing editor of the \"Deseret News\". It was under his direction that the newspaper was first published on a daily basis. In 1866, Cannon began publication of a magazine for youth and young adult Latter-day Saints called \"The Juvenile Instructor\". He owned and published this magazine until his death; in 1901 his family sold the magazine to the LDS Church's Sunday School organization. The periodical was", "id": "19825272" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nCannon and her husband were heads of the Switzerland Mission of the LDS Church. Upon their return to Utah in 1974, Cannon became the first counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the church's Relief Society. Cannon served in this capacity until 1978, when she was released so that she and her husband could become the first missionaries of the church to preach in \"black Africa\". They — along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey — preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 27", "id": "9582965" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\nan LDS Church organization responsible for educating young members of the LDS church, and the magazine was the first church periodical oriented toward youth. Cannon opened the George Q. Cannon & Sons bookstore in 1867 to sell the magazine and other publications of an uplifting nature. Cannon believed that secular novels did not reflect Latter-day Saint values. In the 1880s, Cannon expanded with a branch in Ogden, Utah. It is not known how many books Cannon & Sons actually published itself. In this era, authors commonly self-published", "id": "18344085" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n. Cannon was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. Cannon fathered 32 children, some of whom are Abraham H. Cannon, John Q. Cannon, and Sylvester Q. Cannon, who all became general authorities of the LDS Church; Frank J. Cannon, Utah's first U.S. Senator; and Lewis T. Cannon and Georgius Y. Cannon, prominent architects in Utah. Some of Cannon's prominent descendants include Howard Cannon, U.S. Senator from Nevada from 1959 to 1983 and Chris Cannon, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1997 to", "id": "19825281" }, { "contents": "Salt Lake City Council Hall\n\n\nwho was then the official architect for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Built at First South and 120 East (more on Salt Lake City's coordinate system), sandstone for the structure was delivered from Red Butte Canyon on Utah's first chartered railroad. The well-furnished Greek revival building was completed at a cost of $70,000. In January 1866, City Hall was dedicated by George Q. Cannon, a prominent LDS leader. Many other LDS leaders attended the dedication including Brigham", "id": "19382830" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\n, Cannon moved to Los Angeles and worked as the office manager of his MIT schoolmate Wallace Neff. He later returned to Utah and designed numerous buildings, mostly residences, and some of which remain on the National Register of Historic Places. Among his works were meetinghouses of the LDS Church and other civic buildings. Cannon served on a church-appointed board of six architects that oversaw the construction of the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple. Cannon was the youngest of 32 children born to LDS Church leader George Q. Cannon. His mother,", "id": "12786286" }, { "contents": "Karl G. Maeser\n\n\nin the General Superintendency of the Deseret Sunday School Union. He was the Second Assistant to General Superintendent George Q. Cannon from July 1894 to January 1899. He then served as the First Assistant to Cannon from January 1899 until February 1901. Maeser also participated in the Utah constitutional convention after Abraham Smoot's death in 1895. He proposed an article to support prohibition, but later backed down. Missionaries from the LDS Church were removed from California in 1858 due to the Utah War. Missionary work resumed in 1892. Maeser presided over", "id": "11030473" }, { "contents": "Frank B. Woodbury\n\n\nFrank Bartlett Woodbury (December 27, 1867 – December 21, 1962) was a leader of and an Acting Presiding Patriarch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), one of only three church members to hold this position in church history. Born in St. George, Utah Territory, to Orin Nelson Woodbury and Ann Cannon, Woodbury served in many capacities in the church on a local level. Some, but not all, LDS Church sources list Woodbury as \"Acting Presiding Patriarch\" of", "id": "8238754" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand 1958 and served three full terms. From 1964 to 1971, Cannon was a bishop of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. From 1971 to 1974, he was the president of the Switzerland Mission of the church. In 1978, three weeks after the LDS Church announced that it would no longer impose restrictions of black people receiving the priesthood or participating in temple ordinances, Cannon traveled to Africa on behalf of the church with Merrill J. Bateman to assess the prospects for church missionary work and growth in \"black Africa\"", "id": "9582825" }, { "contents": "Amasa Lyman\n\n\n). Lyman served as the first mayor of San Bernardino. In 1860, Young appointed three of the twelve apostles—Lyman, Charles C. Rich, and George Q. Cannon—to the presidency of the church's European Mission. On March 16, 1862, Lyman preached a sermon in Dundee, Scotland, which all but denied the reality of and the necessity for the atonement of Jesus Christ, which is a central tenet of the LDS Church. His speech appeared to have been overlooked for years, but on January 21", "id": "12068047" }, { "contents": "Mark E. Petersen\n\n\nMark Edward Petersen (November 7, 1900 – January 11, 1984) was an American news editor and religious leader who served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1944 until his death. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, he filled the vacancy in the Quorum caused by the excommunication of Richard R. Lyman. Petersen had become managing editor of the church-owned \"Deseret News\" in 1935 and editor in 1941.", "id": "2692480" }, { "contents": "Thomas C. Griggs\n\n\nthe LDS Church's Aaronic priesthood; his call to this office was given by Apostle George Q. Cannon. With the outbreak of the American Civil War, the Griggs heeded the counsel of LDS Church leaders to move to Utah Territory. The Griggs crossed the plains in Joseph Horne's Mormon pioneer company in 1861. Griggs first joined the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in 1866 when Charles John Thomas was the director. Griggs would continue as a member of the choir until his death in 1903. While Robert Sands was the conductor of the choir", "id": "9481149" }, { "contents": "Charles Clarence Neslen\n\n\nfrom Germany and he was imprisoned in Danzig. He served as president of the Königsberg District of the LDS Church for a part of his mission. Neslen was a member of the Democratic Party and a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1912. Neslen worked a total of 15 years for the \"Deseret News\". He was also a realtor and for a time served as secretary of the Salt Lake Real Estate Association. On October 26, 1905, Neslen married Grace T. Cannon, a daughter of George Q. Cannon.", "id": "21092533" }, { "contents": "Stephen L. Chipman\n\n\nStephen L. Chipman (1864–1945) was a member of the Utah State Legislature in 1903 and a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Utah County. He was also the first president of the Salt Lake Temple who was not also an apostle in the LDS Church. Chipman studied at Brigham Young Academy (the predecessor of Brigham Young University (BYU)) as a youth. From 1885 to 1887 he served as a Mormon missionary in the Southern States Mission of the LDS Church", "id": "15228384" }, { "contents": "Mountain Meadows massacre and Mormon public relations\n\n\nCannon, then president of the LDS California Mission. In the October 13, 1857 edition of Cannon's San Francisco newspaper \"The Western Standard\", Cannon responded to initial news reports of involvement by Mormons by charging the responsible journalists with writing \"reckless and malignant slanders\", despite knowing that the southern Utah Mormons were \"as innocent of [the massacre] as the child unborn\". The church's official newspaper in Salt Lake City, \"The Deseret News\", was initially slow to comment on the massacre,", "id": "22212632" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas the second-most senior apostle of the church after the death of Woodruff, Cannon did not become President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, as would be the practice in the LDS Church today. Rather, because Cannon was a member of the First Presidency, the church simply appointed the next senior apostle of the church—Brigham Young, Jr.—to be the quorum president. (Under today's practices, Cannon would have been appointed the president of the quorum and Young would have been appointed acting president.) Cannon", "id": "19825274" }, { "contents": "Clifford E. Young\n\n\nClifford Earle Young (December 7, 1883 – August 21, 1958) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1941 until his death. Young was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, the son of LDS Church leader Seymour B. Young. From 1905 to 1908, he served as a Mormon missionary in England and Germany. In 1928, Young became the president of the Alpine Stake of the LDS Church in Utah. In 1934, he joined the", "id": "8315768" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n33. Upon his joining the Quorum of the Twelve, Cannon was called to preside over the church's European Mission. Cannon's mission in Europe ended when he was recalled by Young in 1862 to work in Washington, D.C., to assist in the church's promotion of Utah Territory's bid for statehood. At the adjournment of the 1862 congressional session, Cannon again left for Europe to preside over the mission. In this capacity, Cannon was the editor of the \"Millennial Star\" and, for a short time,", "id": "19825271" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nfrom the federal authorities. In September 1888, Cannon surrendered himself and pleaded guilty at trial to charges of unlawful cohabitation under the Edmunds Act. As a result, Cannon served nearly six months in Utah's federal penitentiary. Cannon was pardoned in 1894 by U.S. President Grover Cleveland. Cannon died on April 12, 1901, in Monterey, California, at 74 years of age. Had he lived a few months longer, he would have become the President of the LDS Church: Lorenzo Snow died on October 10 of that year", "id": "19825280" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Isle of Man\n\n\nand Idaho which descends from the 19th century marriage of George Cannon and Ann Quayle before their emigration from Peel, Isle of Man. The family's most notable member was their oldest son George Quayle Cannon. The family is connected by marriage to the Bennion, Taylor, Wells and Young political families. LDS Membership statistics as of January 1, 2011 for the Isle of Man. The nation of the Isle of Man does not have its own mission. Instead it is served by an English mission. Five out of the six", "id": "7797107" }, { "contents": "The Contributor (LDS magazine)\n\n\nThe Contributor was an independent publication associated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) between 1879 and 1896. It was a monthly periodical and sought to represent the Young Men's and Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Associations (YMMIA and YLMIA respectively), the youth organizations of the LDS Church at the time. It was founded by Junius F. Wells, the inaugural head of the YMMIA. Abraham H. Cannon became editor when the magazine was purchased by the Cannon Publishing Company in 1892. With the", "id": "505110" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe official organ of the Sunday School until 1930, when it was replaced with \"The Instructor\". Cannon also served as the first general superintendent of the church's Sunday School from 1867 until his death. On April 8, 1873, Cannon became a member of the church's First Presidency when he was called as the first counselor by Brigham Young. Cannon went on to serve as counselor to three more presidents of the church: he was First Counselor to John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. Although Cannon", "id": "19825273" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\ntogether. Prior to her service in the general Primary presidency, Clara Cannon was a counselor in the presidencies of the Primary and Relief Society in the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. When Louie B. Felt became the first general presidency of the Primary, Matilda M. Barratt and Cannon were selected as Felt's counselors. Cannon was a counselor until 1895; the next year she was succeeded in the position by Josephine R. West. Clara Moses Cannon died of throat cancer in Centerville, Utah, aged 87 and was interred in", "id": "10663424" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nScouts of America and served in the organization's Great Salt Lake Council. Prior to his call as a general authority, Cannon served in the church as a bishop, stake president, patriarch, temple sealer, and regional representative. He was also the president of the church's Central British Mission from 1966 to 1969. From 1969 to 1972, Cannon was an assistant and counselor to W. Jay Eldredge, the general superintendent of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association. Cannon became a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy", "id": "8339580" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe Nauvoo Legion. During this time, Cannon served as printer of the \"Deseret News\" while it was publishing in exile in Fillmore, Utah. After the Utah War, he was called as president of the church's Eastern States Mission. The murder of Parley P. Pratt in 1857 created a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. That vacancy was not filled until Brigham Young called Cannon to the apostleship three years later. Cannon was ordained to the priesthood office of apostle on August 26, 1860, at age", "id": "19825270" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nin the Sandwich Islands (later known as the Kingdom of Hawaii), where he served for four years. While in the islands, Cannon converted many Native Hawaiians. One of the most notable was Jonatana Napela, who assisted Cannon in translating the Book of Mormon into Hawaiian. Joseph F. Smith, a future church president, would follow Cannon and serve in Hawaii one year later. Returning to Utah Territory, Cannon married Elizabeth Hoagland (daughter of Abraham Hoagland and his wife.) He was almost immediately called to assist apostle", "id": "19825268" }, { "contents": "Ronald E. Poelman\n\n\nRonald Eugene Poelman (May 10, 1928 – November 19, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 until his death. In 1984, he delivered a controversial sermon in the LDS Church's general conference which the church redacted before publishing. Poelman was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to a Latter-day Saint family. As a young man, he served as a Mormon missionary in the LDS Church's Netherlands Mission. He began his", "id": "4765396" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\n. He would marry Martha Brown of Ogden in 1878. In 1891 he helped to organize the Utah Republican Party. After a failed bid to become delegate from the Utah Territory, he succeeded and served from March 4, 1895, to January 4, 1896. Cannon was chosen in 1896 to serve as senator by the Utah Legislature in spite of LDS church leadership favoring his father for the job. He served in the United States Senate, initially, as a member of the Republican Party; however, he later became a", "id": "11000346" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nmember of the Silver Republican Party, founded by his successor (and future employer at \"The Salt Lake Tribune\") Thomas Kearns. Cannon lost re-election in 1899. Utah's state legislators indicated they would not support Cannon for re-election shortly after the November 1898 elections. Cannon had voted against the Dingley Act, which would have raised tariffs on sugar and helped the Utah sugar industry. It was strongly supported by the LDS Church hierarchy, who now opposed his re-election. Other factors were his support", "id": "11000347" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand Ghana. The first convert baptized in Africa was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and his wife were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' centre in Nauvoo, Illinois. For three months in 1989, Cannon was the interim president of the LDS Church's Germany Hamburg Mission; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. After his interim service as mission president, Cannon was the second president of the Frankfurt Germany Temple from 1989 to", "id": "9582827" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nCounselor to William B. Preston, the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church; he served in this position between 1884 and 1886. In 1884, shortly after Cannon had become a general authority, a sensationalized news story by Joseph Lippman in the \"Salt Lake Tribune\" alleged that Cannon had taken his wife's sister Louie Wells as a plural wife. Lippman suggested that Cannon and Wells had been married in the Logan Temple. In fact, there had been no such marriage, though it was later revealed that Cannon and Wells had", "id": "7202724" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nbranches of the LDS Church in Nigeria and Ghana. The first convert baptized in Nigeria was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and her husband were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' center in Nauvoo, Illinois. In 1989, they served as interim leaders of the Germany Hamburg Mission of the church; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. From 1989 to 1992, Cannon was the matron of the Frankfurt Germany Temple while her husband", "id": "9582966" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\n's Quorum of the Twelve. Abraham was a son of George Q. Cannon, an early member of the church's First Presidency. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary in the church's Central States Mission. After his mission, he served in the United States Air Force during the Second World War. In 1946, he began attending Brigham Young University (BYU). After graduating from BYU, Cannon became a vice president of Beneficial Life Insurance Company in Salt Lake City. He was active in the Boy", "id": "8339579" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\n1925, Cannon became the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church, succeeding Charles W. Nibley. Cannon's counselors were David A. Smith and John Wells. In 1938, Cannon was released as Presiding Bishop and was succeeded by LeGrand Richards. At the same time, Cannon was ordained an apostle and made an \"associate\" of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, a unique position that had never been filled before. When Quorum member Melvin J. Ballard died the next year, Cannon became a full member of the Quorum; he served", "id": "2194374" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\nClarissa Cordelia (\"Clara\") Moses Cannon (April 21, 1839 – August 21, 1926) was a Mormon pioneer and a member of the first-ever general presidency of the Primary organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). She was the second counselor to general president Louie B. Felt from 1880 to 1895. Clara Moses was born in Westfield, Massachusetts. In 1846 she took the six-month journey on the ship \"Brooklyn\" from New York City to San", "id": "10663422" }, { "contents": "Leonora Cannon Taylor\n\n\nLeonora Cannon Taylor (October 6, 1796–December 9, 1868) was a member of the Relief Society organization at the time of its origin and the first wife of John Taylor, the third president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). On October 6, 1796 in Peel, Isle of Man, Leonora Cannon was born to George Cannon and Leonora Callister. As the oldest daughter in the family, when Leonora's father died when she was thirteen she went away to London to work", "id": "16190675" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\ntheir books, which were then distributed by others. However, Cannon & Sons distributed several important books through their stores and mail order (see table). The company had extensive ties to the LDS Church-owned newspaper, the \"Deseret News.\" Five of Cannon's sons held important positions in the paper, and Cannon himself was editor between 1867 and 1872, and again while temporarily owning the paper from 1892 to 1898. Nearly every George Q. Cannon & Sons book was printed on the \"Deseret News\" press", "id": "18344086" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nof the Utah Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Cannon was the oldest son of George Q. Cannon and the one most expected to follow in his prominent father's footsteps in politics, church office, and journalism. Heber J. Grant once said of Cannon: \"There probably is not a young man in the church who had had more opportunities and advantages extended to him educationally, spiritually, and every other way than John Q. Cannon.\" At the age of 27, Cannon was called to serve as the Second", "id": "7202723" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nMartha Maria \"Mattie\" Hughes Cannon (July 1, 1857 – July 10, 1932) was a Welsh-born immigrant to the United States, a polygamous wife, physician, Utah women's rights advocate and suffragist, and Utah State Senator. Her family immigrated to the United States as converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and traveled West to settle in Utah territory with other Mormons. She started working at the age of fourteen. At sixteen she enrolled in the University", "id": "15993465" }, { "contents": "Church Office Building\n\n\nThe Church Office Building is a 28-story building in Salt Lake City, Utah, which houses the administrative support staff for the lay ministry of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) throughout the world. The building is 420 ft (128 m) tall at roof level and is located within the Temple Square complex on the corner of North Temple and State Street. The building was designed by George Cannon Young at a cost of US$31 million to build. Construction took place from 1962 to 1972", "id": "13754819" }, { "contents": "John Lyman Smith\n\n\nJohn Lyman Smith (November 17, 1828 – February 21, 1898) was an American politician and Mormon missionary. He served as a member of the Utah Territory's Legislative Assembly's House of Representatives for Iron County, Utah, from 1852 to 1853, and the Great Salt Lake County, Utah, from 1853 to 1855. Cousin of the founder of the Latter Day Saint Movement, Joseph Smith, Smith was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) who traveled to the", "id": "18219861" }, { "contents": "Francis M. Lyman\n\n\nFrancis Marion Lyman (January 12, 1840 – November 18, 1916) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was the President of the Quorum from 1903 until his death. Lyman's father and son were also apostles in the church: his father was Amasa M. Lyman and his son was Richard R. Lyman. Both his father and son were excommunicated from the church while serving as apostles. Francis M. Lyman was born as", "id": "20761093" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nAngus Munn Cannon (May 17, 1834 – June 7, 1915) was an early Latter Day Saint leader and Mormon pioneer. Cannon was born in Liverpool, Lancashire, England. His Manx parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 1840, being baptized by his uncle John Taylor. In 1842, the Cannon family went to Nauvoo, Illinois, United States. By 1849, they were in Utah Territory. Cannon was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon and their lives followed very similar paths up", "id": "7202650" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\naffairs while Taylor recovered. This training would serve him well in later life. Cannon's father died in 1845. In 1846, Taylor traveled to England to organize the affairs of the church after Smith's death. Meanwhile, Cannon accompanied Taylor's wife and family as they moved to Winter Quarters, Nebraska. When Taylor returned, Cannon traveled with the entire Taylor family to the Salt Lake Valley, arriving in October 1847. In 1849, Cannon was asked by church president Brigham Young to serve as a missionary for the church", "id": "19825267" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nstaying in the position until December 31, 1903. Cannon attempted to prohibit children not vaccinated from attending school in case of a disease outbreak. The Board of Health sent out vaccines; however, the \"Deseret News\" spread information that vaccines weren't safe. LDS Church leaders were divided on the subject. One apostle, Brigham Young Jr. was very vocal in his opinions, writing in the \"Deseret News\" about the evils of vaccinations. The influence of the \"Deseret News\" and Mormon religious leaders limited how many", "id": "15993490" }, { "contents": "Billy Johnson (Mormon)\n\n\nLDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball announced Official Declaration 2 which extended the priesthood to all worthy male members of the church regardless of race or color. In gratitude, Johnson sent a letter to Kimball, explaining that God had prepared the people in Ghana, asking him to send missionaries to the members. Kimball responded to his pleas and sent the first called missionaries Rendell N. Mabey and Rachel Mabey. They joined Edwin Q. Cannon and Janath R. Cannon. Johnson was finally baptized into the LDS Church on December 9, 1978. He", "id": "4108521" }, { "contents": "Juvenile Instructor\n\n\ncatechisms on the Bible, Book of Mormon, and Doctrine and Covenants; musical compositions; illustrations; stories; editorial teachings; and other aids to gospel instruction. It was the first magazine for children published in the United States west of the Mississippi River. For much of its history, \"The Juvenile Instructor\" was owned by the Cannon family. Its first editor was George Q. Cannon, an apostle in the LDS Church. Cannon and his family continued to publish the magazine privately until January 1, 1901, when the", "id": "9210614" }, { "contents": "Joseph F. Smith\n\n\nand as second counselor to Lorenzo Snow (1898–1901). Smith was appointed first counselor to Snow on the death of first counselor George Q. Cannon, but, as Snow himself died only four days later, Smith never served in that position. He succeeded Snow as president of the LDS Church and president of the Salt Lake Temple. He served as president of the temple until 1911, when he transferred the responsibility to Anthon H. Lund. Smith also served as editor of the \"Improvement Era\" and \"Juvenile Instructor\",", "id": "4117444" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in California\n\n\nQ. Cannon began publication in San Francisco of the \"Western Standard\", a weekly periodical supportive of the Church. The first colonization from Utah to California came in 1851 when a company of about 450 saints and slaves under direction of Elders Amasa M. Lyman and Charles C. Rich of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles settled at what is now San Bernardino. The colony was the final settlement in a string of Mormon communities extending from Salt Lake City in an area known as Deseret. The community thrived, and on July 6,", "id": "22187256" }, { "contents": "Sunday School (LDS Church)\n\n\nout. On November 11, 1867, Young and church leaders Daniel H. Wells, George A. Smith, Wilford Woodruff, George Q. Cannon, and Brigham Young, Jr. met and organized the Parent Sunday School Union. Young appointed Cannon as the first general superintendent of the Sunday School, a position he would hold until his death in 1901. In 1872, the Sunday School organization was renamed the Deseret Sunday School Union. The organized Sunday School addressed lesson topics and source materials, grading, prizes and rewards, use of hymns", "id": "8671425" }, { "contents": "Hugh W. Pinnock\n\n\nHugh Wallace Pinnock (January 15, 1934 – December 16, 2000) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Pinnock was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Western States Mission. Pinnock graduated from University of Utah in 1958, where he became a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity and Owl and Key. Prior to his call to the First", "id": "8519001" }, { "contents": "Charles W. Penrose\n\n\nwas organized Penrose was called as a member of the high council. In 1877, Penrose became the assistant editor of the LDS Church-owned \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, working under George Q. Cannon. Penrose was known for his writing, including missionary tracts and lyrics of Latter-day Saint hymns, including \"God of Our Fathers\", \"O Ye Mountains High\", and \"Up, Awake, Ye Defenders of Zion\". In 1880, Penrose became the editor-in-chief of", "id": "2194239" }, { "contents": "Rulon S. Wells\n\n\nRulon Seymour Wells (July 7, 1854 – May 7, 1941) was a Utah politician and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1893 until his death. Wells was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to LDS Church leader Daniel H. Wells (1814–1891) and Louisa Free (1824–1886). In 1875, Wells travelled to Europe as a Mormon missionary and worked primarily in Germany and Switzerland. He returned to the United States in 1877. On", "id": "8315459" }, { "contents": "G. Homer Durham\n\n\nGeorge Homer Durham (February 4, 1911 – January 10, 1985) was an American academic administrator and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Durham was born in Parowan, Utah, and was raised in Salt Lake City. As a boy in grade school, he met and became lifelong friends with future LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley. As a young man, Durham served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the British", "id": "21588256" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nJonatana Napela or Jonathan Hawaii Napela (first name also spelled Iohatana, full name Napelakapuonamahanaonaleleonalani) (September 11, 1813 – August 6, 1879) was one of the earliest Hawaiian converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Hawaii, joining in the 1830s. He helped translate the Book of Mormon into the Hawaiian language, as \"Ka Buke a Moramona,\" working with missionary George Q. Cannon. Napela was appointed to serve as a superintendent of the colony at Kalaupapa, Molokai", "id": "16647246" }, { "contents": "Richfield, Utah\n\n\nserves about 600 students per year. As in most settled areas of rural Utah, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) plays a prominent role. The Mormons were highly industrious colonizers. From 1847, when they founded Salt Lake City, until 1877, they founded 360 towns. Following direction from Brigham Young, Latter-day Saints founded the town and outlying hamlets about 150 years ago. Members of the LDS Church are predominant among the residents. Even in this heart of Mormon country,", "id": "11082836" }, { "contents": "Marvin O. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Owen Ashton (April 8, 1883 – October 7, 1946) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1938 until his death. Prior to becoming a general authority, Ashton was a prominent local leader of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City, Utah. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Mormon parents. He married Rachel Grace Jeremy in 1906 and in 1907 went to England as a missionary for the LDS Church. He returned", "id": "14505232" }, { "contents": "LeGrand Richards\n\n\nLeGrand Richards (February 6, 1886 – January 11, 1983) was a prominent missionary and leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He served as the seventh presiding bishop of the LDS Church from 1938 to 1952, and was then called as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles by church president David O. McKay. Richards served in the Quorum of the Twelve until his death in Salt Lake City, Utah, at the age of 96. Richards was born in", "id": "2294374" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nwas educated at Lahainaluna School. Napela was trained as a lawyer. He was serving as a judge in Wailuku, Hawaii, when he met American George Q. Cannon, a member of the LDS Church on a missionary trip to Hawaii. After Napela's conversion in the 1830s to the LDS Church, the government forced the judge to resign from his position. The LDS Church was regarded with suspicion. LDS Church historian Andrew Jensen said that Napela \"did splendid missionary work for the Church.\" Napela was sent on a specific", "id": "16647248" }, { "contents": "Gardo House\n\n\ncounselor George Q. Cannon and other church leaders suggested that Taylor occupy the Gardo House after its completion, but he repeatedly refused. However, when church members unanimously voted on April 9, 1879, to make the Gardo House the official parsonage for LDS Church presidents, Taylor reluctantly accepted their decision. Moses Thatcher, William Jennings, and Angus M. Cannon were appointed as a committee to oversee completion of the mansion. On December 27, 1881, the Deseret News published a letter from John Taylor announcing a public reception and tour of", "id": "1496184" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nStates Mission of the church in 1901. In 1902, Grant married George J. Cannon. In 1923, Cannon was asked to succeed Mae Taylor Nystrom as the second counselor to Martha Horne Tingey, the general president of what was then called the Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Association. In 1929, when Ruth May Fox succeeded Tingey, Cannon was asked to be her first counselor. Cannon served in this capacity until 1929, when Fox was released and Cannon was selected by her father, who was President of the Church, to", "id": "1681854" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\n. (At the time, Cannon was a counselor to James E. Faust in the church's International Mission, which had jurisdiction over all areas of the world not otherwise part of a mission.) After Bateman and Cannon reported the results of their trip, Cannon and his wife were called and set apart as the first Mormon missionaries to black Africa. They—along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey—preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 35 branches and 5 districts of the LDS Church in Nigeria", "id": "9582826" }, { "contents": "Marion D. Hanks\n\n\nMarion Duff Hanks (October 13, 1921 – August 5, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1953 until his death. Hanks was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man he served in the Northern States Mission of the LDS Church, which was headquartered in Chicago. He was in the United States Navy during World War II and received a J.D. from the University of Utah. Prior to his call as a general authority", "id": "6558935" }, { "contents": "Lillie T. Freeze\n\n\nthe Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association (YLMIA). In this capacity, she was invited to speak at the Salt Lake Tabernacle on April 6, 1880, at a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the LDS Church's founding. In 1880, Lillie Freeze was one of the founding members of the LDS Church's Primary Association. Freeze was appointed as the first secretary of the general presidency, which was composed of Louie B. Felt, Matilda M. Barratt, and Clara C. M. Cannon. Freeze was secretary until 1888, when", "id": "10906695" }, { "contents": "Henry D. Taylor\n\n\nHenry Dixon Taylor (November 22, 1903 – February 24, 1987) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1958 until his death. Taylor was born in Provo, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Eastern States Mission. During his mission, Taylor was the president of the church's Connecticut District. Taylor received a bachelor's degree from Brigham Young University (BYU) and a master's degree", "id": "2477100" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas elected to be the non-voting delegate for Utah Territory in the United States Congress in 1872. He remained a congressional delegate until 1882, when his seat was declared vacant by the enactment of the Edmunds Act, which terminated many political and civil rights for Utah's Mormon polygamists. By 1880, Cannon had served four terms in Congress as Territorial Delegate. The newly appointed anti-Mormon territorial governor, Eli Houston Murray, openly supported the Liberal Party, which generally opposed church candidates. The 1880 territory-wide election", "id": "19825275" }, { "contents": "George F. Richards\n\n\nGeorge Franklin Richards (February 23, 1861 – August 8, 1950) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from April 9, 1906 until his death. He also served as Acting Presiding Patriarch of the LDS Church from 1937 to 1942 and President of the Quorum of the Twelve from May 25, 1945 until his death. Richards was born in Farmington, Utah Territory, the son of Franklin D. Richards and Nanny Longstroth. Richards", "id": "2194252" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\n1882, at the age of 23, Cannon assumed business control of the \"Juvenile Instructor\" and associated publications. He continued his management until his death. In October 1892, Cannon and his brother John Q. Cannon took control of the \"Deseret News\" publishing. He also became the editor and publisher of \"The Contributor\". On October 9, 1882, Cannon became a member of the First Seven Presidents of the Seventy of the church. On October 7, 1889, church president Wilford Woodruff named Cannon a member", "id": "9035316" }, { "contents": "Howard Cannon\n\n\nHis grandfather David Cannon, was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon, and a leading figure in the building of the St. George Temple, who was later the third president of that temple. His father Walter Cannon was one of David Cannon's 31 children. Howard's parents had married in 1909, his mother was Leah Sullivan. When Cannon was two years old his father left for England to served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for two years. Cannon went to Woodward School in", "id": "18060013" }, { "contents": "Mormon fiction\n\n\nMormons were generally non-fiction, including scripture, missionary tracts, and doctrinal literature. In 1844, Parley P. Pratt published what is commonly cited as the first work of LDS fiction, the didactic \"Dialogue between Joseph Smith and the Devil\". It was first published in the New York Herald. Early Mormon leaders like Brigham Young and George Q. Cannon condemned novels for wasting time, a rhetoric that persisted until the 1880s. Fiction among LDS Church members developed once the Mormons had settled in Utah and developed a degree of", "id": "453087" }, { "contents": "Marvin J. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Jeremy Ashton (May 6, 1915 – February 25, 1994) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1971 until his death. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was the son of Marvin O. Ashton, a local LDS leader, who later became a church general authority. The younger Ashton worked in the lumber business as a youth. He graduated from the University of Utah. He served a", "id": "19825413" }, { "contents": "Rudger Clawson\n\n\nRudger Judd Clawson (March 12, 1857 – June 21, 1943) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1898 until his death in 1943. He also served as President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1921 until his death and as a member of the First Presidency of the LDS Church for five days in 1901. Clawson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to Hiram Bradley Clawson and Margaret Judd", "id": "9035430" }, { "contents": "Utah-Idaho Sugar Company\n\n\npayment and a $130,000 loan. Cutler also went to Chicago and New York City to secure loans from banks; he came back, via train, with a bag full of money, as he did not think any banks in Utah could have cashed the large bank draft. The LDS church made more payments and secured more loans. In addition, George Q. Cannon and Heber J. Grant personally funded the enterprise. Joseph F. Smith, president of the LDS Church, gave a sermon in 1893 explaining that this was done to", "id": "1319991" }, { "contents": "President of the Church (LDS Church)\n\n\nthe President of the Quorum. When Woodruff died, his counselors returned to the Quorum based on the date they were ordained an apostle, placing George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith below Brigham Young Jr. and John Willard Young. Heber J. Grant objected to that arguing that seniority should be based on ordination to the Quorum rather than ordination as an apostle. Young argued that an apostle should not be demoted as long as he is worthy of the position. On March 31, 1900, Snow met with his counselors, Cannon and", "id": "16343191" }, { "contents": "Alfred W. McCune\n\n\n. Judge Orlando Powers, Associate Justice of the Utah Supreme Court, said in 1906 that he understood that McCune was not a Mormon. Frank J. Cannon, too, claimed McCune was not a Mormon, and B. H. Roberts, LDS Church historian and member of the First Council of the Seventy, said in 1930 that McCune was not a church member. Historian Orvin Malmquist, however, says that church records show he was baptized into the LDS Church at the age of eight in 1857, and that his marriage to Elizabeth", "id": "15062757" } ]
Joseph Jenne Cannon ( May 22 , 1877 -- November 5 , 1945 ) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ( LDS Church ) . He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family . As a young man , Cannon served as a for the LDS Church in Europe . He accompanied LDS Church apostle [START_ENT] Francis M. Lyman [END_ENT] in offering prayers in and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903 . Lyman and Cannon also similarly dedicated Finland in 1903 . In the 1908 election , Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from . He served one term , from 1909 to 1911 . Cannon was not formally associated with any political party . From 1931 to 1934 , Cannon was the editor of the Deseret News , a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church . His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church 's British Mission . Cannon served in this capacity for three years , until 1937 . Immediately following his return to Utah , Cannon was asked to become the first assistant to George Q. Morris , the general superintendent of the church 's . Cannon served in this capacity until his death from pancreatic cancer
c6a71d92-5d5a-4d6e-8d83-3a677d3a5bde_Joseph_J._Canno:5
[{"answer": "Francis M. Lyman", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "1783358", "title": "Francis M. Lyman"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nJoseph Jenne Cannon (May 22, 1877 – November 5, 1945) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Europe. He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in St. Petersburg and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903. Lyman and Cannon", "id": "13710370" }, { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nalso similarly dedicated Finland in 1903. In the 1908 election, Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. He served one term, from 1909 to 1911. Cannon was not formally associated with any political party. From 1931 to 1934, Cannon was the editor of the \"Deseret News\", a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church. His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church's British Mission. Cannon served in this", "id": "13710371" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nSylvester Quayle Cannon (June 10, 1877 – May 29, 1943) was an American businessman, engineer, and religious leader who served as the sixth presiding bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1925 to 1938 and a member of church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1939 until his death. He was the son of George Q. Cannon, an apostle and member of the church's First Presidency. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. He studied", "id": "2194372" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nJohn Quayle Cannon (April 19, 1857 – January 14, 1931) was an editor-in-chief of the \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, Utah, and a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He also served as a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army during the Spanish–American War. He was the son of LDS Church apostle George Q. Cannon and Elizabeth Hoagland. He was married to Elizabeth \"Annie\" Wells Cannon. Cannon", "id": "7202721" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nFrank Jenne Cannon (January 25, 1859July 25, 1933) was the first United States Senator from Utah, who served from 1896 to 1899. Born in Salt Lake City, he was the eldest child of Sarah Jenne Cannon and George Q. Cannon. His father was an Apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and later was a member of its First Presidency. After attending the school in Salt Lake City, he studied at University of Deseret, graduating at the age of 19", "id": "11000345" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nEdwin Quayle \"Ted\" Cannon, Jr. (May 6, 1918 – April 6, 2005) was a Utah politician and businessman and was a prominent leader and missionary in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was among the first missionaries in the LDS Church to preach to black people in Africa and was part of the first group missionaries sent to establish official congregations of the LDS Church in West Africa. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Edwin Q. Cannon,", "id": "9582822" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Ivins Cannon (March 9, 1920 – August 4, 2009) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1986 to 1991. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, Cannon was the son of George J. Cannon and Lucy Grant Cannon, a leader of the youth in the LDS Church. His maternal grandfather was Heber J. Grant, the seventh president of the LDS Church. His paternal grandfather was Abraham H. Cannon, who was a member of the church", "id": "8339578" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nLucy Grant Cannon (October 22, 1880 – May 7, 1966) was the fourth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1937 to 1948. She was a member of the general presidency of the Young Women from 1923 to 1948, serving as a counselor to two presidents. Lucy Grant was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Lucy Stringham and LDS Church apostle Heber J. Grant. She served as a church missionary in the Western", "id": "1681853" }, { "contents": "George Mousley Cannon\n\n\nTrust Company. He served as a delegate to the 1895 Utah State Constitutional Convention and chaired the committee which formulated the articles on taxation and public debt. In 1896, Cannon was elected to the Utah State Senate and served as its first president. When The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) modified stake boundaries in 1900, dividing the new Granite Stake off from the Salt Lake Stake, Cannon became the Sunday School Superintendent of the new stake. From 1901 until after 1930, Cannon served as", "id": "8629874" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nat the University of Utah and then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received a B.S. degree in mining engineering. In 1899, Cannon began an LDS Church mission in Belgium. Cannon then served from 1900 to 1902 as president of the church's Netherlands–Belgium Mission. Cannon also served as Francis M. Lyman's secretary on a three-month trip to many nations along the Mediterranean and in the Middle East. From 1916 to 1925, Cannon served as president of the Pioneer Stake in Salt Lake City. In", "id": "2194373" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\nAbraham Hoagland Cannon (also reported as Abram H. Cannon) (March 12, 1859 – July 19, 1896) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. His parents were George Q. Cannon, a Latter Day Saints apostle, and Elizabeth Hoagland, daughter of Abraham Hoagland. Cannon studied at Deseret University. Later, he studied architecture under Obed Taylor. Cannon married Sarah A.", "id": "9035314" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nSr. and Luella Wareing. He was born at his parents' home because of the 1918 influenza pandemic. Cannon's paternal grandfather was George Q. Cannon, a Mormon pioneer and prominent leader in the LDS Church. Cannon was raised in Salt Lake City. In 1937, Cannon went on a mission for the LDS Church to Nazi Germany. He was president of a branch of the church in Berlin in 1939 when the LDS Church evacuated its missionaries from Europe at the beginning of World War II. Cannon finished his mission in", "id": "9582823" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\n. Callville was submerged when Lake Mead was filled. In 1869 and 1870, Cannon served a second mission in the Eastern United States. In April 1876, Cannon became president of the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. He served in this position until April 1, 1904. After his time as stake president, Cannon served as a patriarch in the church. Cannon was the mayor of St. George, Utah Territory in 1861 and 1862. In 1896, after Utah had become a U.S. state, he stood for election", "id": "7202652" }, { "contents": "Donald Q. Cannon\n\n\nDonald Quayle Cannon (born 1936) is a retired professor at Brigham Young University who specializes in Mormon history, particularly early Mormon history and international Mormon history. As a young man, Cannon was a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Germany. Cannon earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Utah. Cannon holds a Ph.D. from Clark University. In the late 1960s, he taught at the University of Southern Maine. In the LDS Church he has", "id": "10057919" }, { "contents": "George Goddard (Mormon)\n\n\nwas the clerk to LDS Church presiding bishop Edward Hunter. From 1874 to 1884, Goddard was the clerk of the LDS Church's biannual general conferences. In 1872, Goddard became the inaugural first assistant to George Q. Cannon, the first superintendent of the Deseret Sunday School Union. Goddard served in this capacity for 26 years, until his death in 1899. Goddard was also a member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and a patriarch in the church. He died in Salt Lake City and was buried at Salt Lake City Cemetery.", "id": "7701639" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nuntil their arrival in Utah. In 1854, Cannon went on a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to the Eastern United States, where he assisted John Taylor in publishing a periodical entitled \"The Mormon\". He also preached and baptized in Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware. Cannon returned to Utah Territory due to the troubles connected with the Utah War. In 1864, Cannon helped establish Call's Landing on the Colorado River, later known as Callville, Nevada", "id": "7202651" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nJanath Russell Cannon (October 28, 1918 – July 5, 2007) was a counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was also a prominent missionary in the church and was among the first to preach to black people in Africa. Born in Ogden, Utah, Janath Russell was educated at Wellesley College. In 1941, she married Edwin Q. Cannon in the Salt Lake Temple. From 1971 to 1974,", "id": "9582964" }, { "contents": "Joseph A. Cannon\n\n\nserved as an assistant administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from 1983 to 1985. Joseph A. Cannon was born on July 31, 1949. Cannon served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Ireland, including on the Isle of Man, the ancestral homeland of the Cannons. Cannon received a degree in political science and, in 1977, a law degree from Brigham Young University. Cannon served as a law clerk in Salt Lake City for U.S. District", "id": "7202830" }, { "contents": "Elaine A. Cannon\n\n\nElaine Anderson Cannon (April 9, 1922 – May 19, 2003) was the eighth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 to 1984. Cannon has been a writer and an editor and is the author of over 50 books. Elaine Anderson was born to Aldon Joseph and Minnie Egan Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a teenager, she started writing a daily column aimed at teenagers for the \"Deseret News\". She", "id": "1682052" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nAdele Morris Cannon Howells (January 11, 1886 – April 14, 1951) was the fourth general president of the Primary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1943 until her death of rheumatic heart disease. She contributed to \"The Children's Friend\" magazine, as well as the fundraising for the Children's Primary Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. Adele Morris Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to George Mousley Cannon and Marian Adelaide Morris. She", "id": "1336419" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\nGeorgius Young Cannon (March 6, 1892 – March 29, 1987) was a 20th-century architect in the American West who operated principally out of Salt Lake City, Utah. Cannon trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), graduating in 1918. He then joined the army and later returned to Utah to intern with the architectural firm Ware & Treganza and Cannon & Fetzer. He served two missions to Germany for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). For a time", "id": "12786285" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Quayle Cannon (January 11, 1827 – April 12, 1901) was an early member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), and served in the First Presidency under four successive presidents of the church: Brigham Young, John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. He was the church's chief political strategist, and was dubbed \"the Mormon premier\" and \"the Mormon Richelieu\" by the press. He was also a five", "id": "19825263" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nwas the oldest of nine children, and her father George Cannon was the first president of the Utah State Senate. As a child, Cannon suffered from rheumatic fever. She enjoyed reading in her spare time and horseback riding. She was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Cannon attended schools in Salt Lake City and graduated from the LDS High School and Business College in 1903. She attended the University of Utah and studied physical education and graduated with her bachelor's degree in 1909. Cannon", "id": "1336420" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nis one of the few general authorities of the LDS Church to have been excommunicated. From 1889 until 1892, Cannon was the editor of the \"Ogden Standard\". From October 1892 until April 1898, he was the editor in chief of the \"Deseret News\". After the Spanish–American War he returned to work at the \"Deseret News\" and served as an executive editor of the newspaper off-and-on until his death. He was much beloved by his co-workers. Cannon was a member", "id": "7202722" }, { "contents": "Tracy Y. Cannon\n\n\nLatter-day Saints. In 1939, he was made second assistant to Melvin J. Ballard, supervisor of the committee. From 1915 to 1927, Cannon was a member of the high council of the Pioneer Stake of the LDS Church. In 1917, he became a member of the Deseret Sunday School Union General Board. From 1930 through 1936, Cannon was bishop of the Cannon Ward in Salt Lake City. Cannon was an editor of the 1927 LDS Church hymnal. In 1925, Cannon was appointed director of the McCune School", "id": "12019030" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe church's Welsh-language periodical, \"Udgorn Seion\". From 1867 to 1874, Cannon was the managing editor of the \"Deseret News\". It was under his direction that the newspaper was first published on a daily basis. In 1866, Cannon began publication of a magazine for youth and young adult Latter-day Saints called \"The Juvenile Instructor\". He owned and published this magazine until his death; in 1901 his family sold the magazine to the LDS Church's Sunday School organization. The periodical was", "id": "19825272" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nCannon and her husband were heads of the Switzerland Mission of the LDS Church. Upon their return to Utah in 1974, Cannon became the first counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the church's Relief Society. Cannon served in this capacity until 1978, when she was released so that she and her husband could become the first missionaries of the church to preach in \"black Africa\". They — along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey — preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 27", "id": "9582965" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\nan LDS Church organization responsible for educating young members of the LDS church, and the magazine was the first church periodical oriented toward youth. Cannon opened the George Q. Cannon & Sons bookstore in 1867 to sell the magazine and other publications of an uplifting nature. Cannon believed that secular novels did not reflect Latter-day Saint values. In the 1880s, Cannon expanded with a branch in Ogden, Utah. It is not known how many books Cannon & Sons actually published itself. In this era, authors commonly self-published", "id": "18344085" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n. Cannon was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. Cannon fathered 32 children, some of whom are Abraham H. Cannon, John Q. Cannon, and Sylvester Q. Cannon, who all became general authorities of the LDS Church; Frank J. Cannon, Utah's first U.S. Senator; and Lewis T. Cannon and Georgius Y. Cannon, prominent architects in Utah. Some of Cannon's prominent descendants include Howard Cannon, U.S. Senator from Nevada from 1959 to 1983 and Chris Cannon, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1997 to", "id": "19825281" }, { "contents": "Salt Lake City Council Hall\n\n\nwho was then the official architect for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Built at First South and 120 East (more on Salt Lake City's coordinate system), sandstone for the structure was delivered from Red Butte Canyon on Utah's first chartered railroad. The well-furnished Greek revival building was completed at a cost of $70,000. In January 1866, City Hall was dedicated by George Q. Cannon, a prominent LDS leader. Many other LDS leaders attended the dedication including Brigham", "id": "19382830" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\n, Cannon moved to Los Angeles and worked as the office manager of his MIT schoolmate Wallace Neff. He later returned to Utah and designed numerous buildings, mostly residences, and some of which remain on the National Register of Historic Places. Among his works were meetinghouses of the LDS Church and other civic buildings. Cannon served on a church-appointed board of six architects that oversaw the construction of the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple. Cannon was the youngest of 32 children born to LDS Church leader George Q. Cannon. His mother,", "id": "12786286" }, { "contents": "Karl G. Maeser\n\n\nin the General Superintendency of the Deseret Sunday School Union. He was the Second Assistant to General Superintendent George Q. Cannon from July 1894 to January 1899. He then served as the First Assistant to Cannon from January 1899 until February 1901. Maeser also participated in the Utah constitutional convention after Abraham Smoot's death in 1895. He proposed an article to support prohibition, but later backed down. Missionaries from the LDS Church were removed from California in 1858 due to the Utah War. Missionary work resumed in 1892. Maeser presided over", "id": "11030473" }, { "contents": "Frank B. Woodbury\n\n\nFrank Bartlett Woodbury (December 27, 1867 – December 21, 1962) was a leader of and an Acting Presiding Patriarch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), one of only three church members to hold this position in church history. Born in St. George, Utah Territory, to Orin Nelson Woodbury and Ann Cannon, Woodbury served in many capacities in the church on a local level. Some, but not all, LDS Church sources list Woodbury as \"Acting Presiding Patriarch\" of", "id": "8238754" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand 1958 and served three full terms. From 1964 to 1971, Cannon was a bishop of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. From 1971 to 1974, he was the president of the Switzerland Mission of the church. In 1978, three weeks after the LDS Church announced that it would no longer impose restrictions of black people receiving the priesthood or participating in temple ordinances, Cannon traveled to Africa on behalf of the church with Merrill J. Bateman to assess the prospects for church missionary work and growth in \"black Africa\"", "id": "9582825" }, { "contents": "Amasa Lyman\n\n\n). Lyman served as the first mayor of San Bernardino. In 1860, Young appointed three of the twelve apostles—Lyman, Charles C. Rich, and George Q. Cannon—to the presidency of the church's European Mission. On March 16, 1862, Lyman preached a sermon in Dundee, Scotland, which all but denied the reality of and the necessity for the atonement of Jesus Christ, which is a central tenet of the LDS Church. His speech appeared to have been overlooked for years, but on January 21", "id": "12068047" }, { "contents": "Mark E. Petersen\n\n\nMark Edward Petersen (November 7, 1900 – January 11, 1984) was an American news editor and religious leader who served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1944 until his death. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, he filled the vacancy in the Quorum caused by the excommunication of Richard R. Lyman. Petersen had become managing editor of the church-owned \"Deseret News\" in 1935 and editor in 1941.", "id": "2692480" }, { "contents": "Thomas C. Griggs\n\n\nthe LDS Church's Aaronic priesthood; his call to this office was given by Apostle George Q. Cannon. With the outbreak of the American Civil War, the Griggs heeded the counsel of LDS Church leaders to move to Utah Territory. The Griggs crossed the plains in Joseph Horne's Mormon pioneer company in 1861. Griggs first joined the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in 1866 when Charles John Thomas was the director. Griggs would continue as a member of the choir until his death in 1903. While Robert Sands was the conductor of the choir", "id": "9481149" }, { "contents": "Charles Clarence Neslen\n\n\nfrom Germany and he was imprisoned in Danzig. He served as president of the Königsberg District of the LDS Church for a part of his mission. Neslen was a member of the Democratic Party and a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1912. Neslen worked a total of 15 years for the \"Deseret News\". He was also a realtor and for a time served as secretary of the Salt Lake Real Estate Association. On October 26, 1905, Neslen married Grace T. Cannon, a daughter of George Q. Cannon.", "id": "21092533" }, { "contents": "Stephen L. Chipman\n\n\nStephen L. Chipman (1864–1945) was a member of the Utah State Legislature in 1903 and a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Utah County. He was also the first president of the Salt Lake Temple who was not also an apostle in the LDS Church. Chipman studied at Brigham Young Academy (the predecessor of Brigham Young University (BYU)) as a youth. From 1885 to 1887 he served as a Mormon missionary in the Southern States Mission of the LDS Church", "id": "15228384" }, { "contents": "Mountain Meadows massacre and Mormon public relations\n\n\nCannon, then president of the LDS California Mission. In the October 13, 1857 edition of Cannon's San Francisco newspaper \"The Western Standard\", Cannon responded to initial news reports of involvement by Mormons by charging the responsible journalists with writing \"reckless and malignant slanders\", despite knowing that the southern Utah Mormons were \"as innocent of [the massacre] as the child unborn\". The church's official newspaper in Salt Lake City, \"The Deseret News\", was initially slow to comment on the massacre,", "id": "22212632" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas the second-most senior apostle of the church after the death of Woodruff, Cannon did not become President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, as would be the practice in the LDS Church today. Rather, because Cannon was a member of the First Presidency, the church simply appointed the next senior apostle of the church—Brigham Young, Jr.—to be the quorum president. (Under today's practices, Cannon would have been appointed the president of the quorum and Young would have been appointed acting president.) Cannon", "id": "19825274" }, { "contents": "Clifford E. Young\n\n\nClifford Earle Young (December 7, 1883 – August 21, 1958) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1941 until his death. Young was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, the son of LDS Church leader Seymour B. Young. From 1905 to 1908, he served as a Mormon missionary in England and Germany. In 1928, Young became the president of the Alpine Stake of the LDS Church in Utah. In 1934, he joined the", "id": "8315768" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n33. Upon his joining the Quorum of the Twelve, Cannon was called to preside over the church's European Mission. Cannon's mission in Europe ended when he was recalled by Young in 1862 to work in Washington, D.C., to assist in the church's promotion of Utah Territory's bid for statehood. At the adjournment of the 1862 congressional session, Cannon again left for Europe to preside over the mission. In this capacity, Cannon was the editor of the \"Millennial Star\" and, for a short time,", "id": "19825271" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nfrom the federal authorities. In September 1888, Cannon surrendered himself and pleaded guilty at trial to charges of unlawful cohabitation under the Edmunds Act. As a result, Cannon served nearly six months in Utah's federal penitentiary. Cannon was pardoned in 1894 by U.S. President Grover Cleveland. Cannon died on April 12, 1901, in Monterey, California, at 74 years of age. Had he lived a few months longer, he would have become the President of the LDS Church: Lorenzo Snow died on October 10 of that year", "id": "19825280" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Isle of Man\n\n\nand Idaho which descends from the 19th century marriage of George Cannon and Ann Quayle before their emigration from Peel, Isle of Man. The family's most notable member was their oldest son George Quayle Cannon. The family is connected by marriage to the Bennion, Taylor, Wells and Young political families. LDS Membership statistics as of January 1, 2011 for the Isle of Man. The nation of the Isle of Man does not have its own mission. Instead it is served by an English mission. Five out of the six", "id": "7797107" }, { "contents": "The Contributor (LDS magazine)\n\n\nThe Contributor was an independent publication associated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) between 1879 and 1896. It was a monthly periodical and sought to represent the Young Men's and Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Associations (YMMIA and YLMIA respectively), the youth organizations of the LDS Church at the time. It was founded by Junius F. Wells, the inaugural head of the YMMIA. Abraham H. Cannon became editor when the magazine was purchased by the Cannon Publishing Company in 1892. With the", "id": "505110" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe official organ of the Sunday School until 1930, when it was replaced with \"The Instructor\". Cannon also served as the first general superintendent of the church's Sunday School from 1867 until his death. On April 8, 1873, Cannon became a member of the church's First Presidency when he was called as the first counselor by Brigham Young. Cannon went on to serve as counselor to three more presidents of the church: he was First Counselor to John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. Although Cannon", "id": "19825273" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\ntogether. Prior to her service in the general Primary presidency, Clara Cannon was a counselor in the presidencies of the Primary and Relief Society in the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. When Louie B. Felt became the first general presidency of the Primary, Matilda M. Barratt and Cannon were selected as Felt's counselors. Cannon was a counselor until 1895; the next year she was succeeded in the position by Josephine R. West. Clara Moses Cannon died of throat cancer in Centerville, Utah, aged 87 and was interred in", "id": "10663424" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nScouts of America and served in the organization's Great Salt Lake Council. Prior to his call as a general authority, Cannon served in the church as a bishop, stake president, patriarch, temple sealer, and regional representative. He was also the president of the church's Central British Mission from 1966 to 1969. From 1969 to 1972, Cannon was an assistant and counselor to W. Jay Eldredge, the general superintendent of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association. Cannon became a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy", "id": "8339580" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe Nauvoo Legion. During this time, Cannon served as printer of the \"Deseret News\" while it was publishing in exile in Fillmore, Utah. After the Utah War, he was called as president of the church's Eastern States Mission. The murder of Parley P. Pratt in 1857 created a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. That vacancy was not filled until Brigham Young called Cannon to the apostleship three years later. Cannon was ordained to the priesthood office of apostle on August 26, 1860, at age", "id": "19825270" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nin the Sandwich Islands (later known as the Kingdom of Hawaii), where he served for four years. While in the islands, Cannon converted many Native Hawaiians. One of the most notable was Jonatana Napela, who assisted Cannon in translating the Book of Mormon into Hawaiian. Joseph F. Smith, a future church president, would follow Cannon and serve in Hawaii one year later. Returning to Utah Territory, Cannon married Elizabeth Hoagland (daughter of Abraham Hoagland and his wife.) He was almost immediately called to assist apostle", "id": "19825268" }, { "contents": "Ronald E. Poelman\n\n\nRonald Eugene Poelman (May 10, 1928 – November 19, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 until his death. In 1984, he delivered a controversial sermon in the LDS Church's general conference which the church redacted before publishing. Poelman was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to a Latter-day Saint family. As a young man, he served as a Mormon missionary in the LDS Church's Netherlands Mission. He began his", "id": "4765396" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\n. He would marry Martha Brown of Ogden in 1878. In 1891 he helped to organize the Utah Republican Party. After a failed bid to become delegate from the Utah Territory, he succeeded and served from March 4, 1895, to January 4, 1896. Cannon was chosen in 1896 to serve as senator by the Utah Legislature in spite of LDS church leadership favoring his father for the job. He served in the United States Senate, initially, as a member of the Republican Party; however, he later became a", "id": "11000346" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nmember of the Silver Republican Party, founded by his successor (and future employer at \"The Salt Lake Tribune\") Thomas Kearns. Cannon lost re-election in 1899. Utah's state legislators indicated they would not support Cannon for re-election shortly after the November 1898 elections. Cannon had voted against the Dingley Act, which would have raised tariffs on sugar and helped the Utah sugar industry. It was strongly supported by the LDS Church hierarchy, who now opposed his re-election. Other factors were his support", "id": "11000347" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand Ghana. The first convert baptized in Africa was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and his wife were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' centre in Nauvoo, Illinois. For three months in 1989, Cannon was the interim president of the LDS Church's Germany Hamburg Mission; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. After his interim service as mission president, Cannon was the second president of the Frankfurt Germany Temple from 1989 to", "id": "9582827" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nCounselor to William B. Preston, the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church; he served in this position between 1884 and 1886. In 1884, shortly after Cannon had become a general authority, a sensationalized news story by Joseph Lippman in the \"Salt Lake Tribune\" alleged that Cannon had taken his wife's sister Louie Wells as a plural wife. Lippman suggested that Cannon and Wells had been married in the Logan Temple. In fact, there had been no such marriage, though it was later revealed that Cannon and Wells had", "id": "7202724" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nbranches of the LDS Church in Nigeria and Ghana. The first convert baptized in Nigeria was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and her husband were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' center in Nauvoo, Illinois. In 1989, they served as interim leaders of the Germany Hamburg Mission of the church; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. From 1989 to 1992, Cannon was the matron of the Frankfurt Germany Temple while her husband", "id": "9582966" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\n's Quorum of the Twelve. Abraham was a son of George Q. Cannon, an early member of the church's First Presidency. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary in the church's Central States Mission. After his mission, he served in the United States Air Force during the Second World War. In 1946, he began attending Brigham Young University (BYU). After graduating from BYU, Cannon became a vice president of Beneficial Life Insurance Company in Salt Lake City. He was active in the Boy", "id": "8339579" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\n1925, Cannon became the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church, succeeding Charles W. Nibley. Cannon's counselors were David A. Smith and John Wells. In 1938, Cannon was released as Presiding Bishop and was succeeded by LeGrand Richards. At the same time, Cannon was ordained an apostle and made an \"associate\" of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, a unique position that had never been filled before. When Quorum member Melvin J. Ballard died the next year, Cannon became a full member of the Quorum; he served", "id": "2194374" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\nClarissa Cordelia (\"Clara\") Moses Cannon (April 21, 1839 – August 21, 1926) was a Mormon pioneer and a member of the first-ever general presidency of the Primary organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). She was the second counselor to general president Louie B. Felt from 1880 to 1895. Clara Moses was born in Westfield, Massachusetts. In 1846 she took the six-month journey on the ship \"Brooklyn\" from New York City to San", "id": "10663422" }, { "contents": "Leonora Cannon Taylor\n\n\nLeonora Cannon Taylor (October 6, 1796–December 9, 1868) was a member of the Relief Society organization at the time of its origin and the first wife of John Taylor, the third president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). On October 6, 1796 in Peel, Isle of Man, Leonora Cannon was born to George Cannon and Leonora Callister. As the oldest daughter in the family, when Leonora's father died when she was thirteen she went away to London to work", "id": "16190675" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\ntheir books, which were then distributed by others. However, Cannon & Sons distributed several important books through their stores and mail order (see table). The company had extensive ties to the LDS Church-owned newspaper, the \"Deseret News.\" Five of Cannon's sons held important positions in the paper, and Cannon himself was editor between 1867 and 1872, and again while temporarily owning the paper from 1892 to 1898. Nearly every George Q. Cannon & Sons book was printed on the \"Deseret News\" press", "id": "18344086" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nof the Utah Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Cannon was the oldest son of George Q. Cannon and the one most expected to follow in his prominent father's footsteps in politics, church office, and journalism. Heber J. Grant once said of Cannon: \"There probably is not a young man in the church who had had more opportunities and advantages extended to him educationally, spiritually, and every other way than John Q. Cannon.\" At the age of 27, Cannon was called to serve as the Second", "id": "7202723" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nMartha Maria \"Mattie\" Hughes Cannon (July 1, 1857 – July 10, 1932) was a Welsh-born immigrant to the United States, a polygamous wife, physician, Utah women's rights advocate and suffragist, and Utah State Senator. Her family immigrated to the United States as converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and traveled West to settle in Utah territory with other Mormons. She started working at the age of fourteen. At sixteen she enrolled in the University", "id": "15993465" }, { "contents": "Church Office Building\n\n\nThe Church Office Building is a 28-story building in Salt Lake City, Utah, which houses the administrative support staff for the lay ministry of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) throughout the world. The building is 420 ft (128 m) tall at roof level and is located within the Temple Square complex on the corner of North Temple and State Street. The building was designed by George Cannon Young at a cost of US$31 million to build. Construction took place from 1962 to 1972", "id": "13754819" }, { "contents": "John Lyman Smith\n\n\nJohn Lyman Smith (November 17, 1828 – February 21, 1898) was an American politician and Mormon missionary. He served as a member of the Utah Territory's Legislative Assembly's House of Representatives for Iron County, Utah, from 1852 to 1853, and the Great Salt Lake County, Utah, from 1853 to 1855. Cousin of the founder of the Latter Day Saint Movement, Joseph Smith, Smith was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) who traveled to the", "id": "18219861" }, { "contents": "Francis M. Lyman\n\n\nFrancis Marion Lyman (January 12, 1840 – November 18, 1916) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was the President of the Quorum from 1903 until his death. Lyman's father and son were also apostles in the church: his father was Amasa M. Lyman and his son was Richard R. Lyman. Both his father and son were excommunicated from the church while serving as apostles. Francis M. Lyman was born as", "id": "20761093" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nAngus Munn Cannon (May 17, 1834 – June 7, 1915) was an early Latter Day Saint leader and Mormon pioneer. Cannon was born in Liverpool, Lancashire, England. His Manx parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 1840, being baptized by his uncle John Taylor. In 1842, the Cannon family went to Nauvoo, Illinois, United States. By 1849, they were in Utah Territory. Cannon was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon and their lives followed very similar paths up", "id": "7202650" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\naffairs while Taylor recovered. This training would serve him well in later life. Cannon's father died in 1845. In 1846, Taylor traveled to England to organize the affairs of the church after Smith's death. Meanwhile, Cannon accompanied Taylor's wife and family as they moved to Winter Quarters, Nebraska. When Taylor returned, Cannon traveled with the entire Taylor family to the Salt Lake Valley, arriving in October 1847. In 1849, Cannon was asked by church president Brigham Young to serve as a missionary for the church", "id": "19825267" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nstaying in the position until December 31, 1903. Cannon attempted to prohibit children not vaccinated from attending school in case of a disease outbreak. The Board of Health sent out vaccines; however, the \"Deseret News\" spread information that vaccines weren't safe. LDS Church leaders were divided on the subject. One apostle, Brigham Young Jr. was very vocal in his opinions, writing in the \"Deseret News\" about the evils of vaccinations. The influence of the \"Deseret News\" and Mormon religious leaders limited how many", "id": "15993490" }, { "contents": "Billy Johnson (Mormon)\n\n\nLDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball announced Official Declaration 2 which extended the priesthood to all worthy male members of the church regardless of race or color. In gratitude, Johnson sent a letter to Kimball, explaining that God had prepared the people in Ghana, asking him to send missionaries to the members. Kimball responded to his pleas and sent the first called missionaries Rendell N. Mabey and Rachel Mabey. They joined Edwin Q. Cannon and Janath R. Cannon. Johnson was finally baptized into the LDS Church on December 9, 1978. He", "id": "4108521" }, { "contents": "Juvenile Instructor\n\n\ncatechisms on the Bible, Book of Mormon, and Doctrine and Covenants; musical compositions; illustrations; stories; editorial teachings; and other aids to gospel instruction. It was the first magazine for children published in the United States west of the Mississippi River. For much of its history, \"The Juvenile Instructor\" was owned by the Cannon family. Its first editor was George Q. Cannon, an apostle in the LDS Church. Cannon and his family continued to publish the magazine privately until January 1, 1901, when the", "id": "9210614" }, { "contents": "Joseph F. Smith\n\n\nand as second counselor to Lorenzo Snow (1898–1901). Smith was appointed first counselor to Snow on the death of first counselor George Q. Cannon, but, as Snow himself died only four days later, Smith never served in that position. He succeeded Snow as president of the LDS Church and president of the Salt Lake Temple. He served as president of the temple until 1911, when he transferred the responsibility to Anthon H. Lund. Smith also served as editor of the \"Improvement Era\" and \"Juvenile Instructor\",", "id": "4117444" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in California\n\n\nQ. Cannon began publication in San Francisco of the \"Western Standard\", a weekly periodical supportive of the Church. The first colonization from Utah to California came in 1851 when a company of about 450 saints and slaves under direction of Elders Amasa M. Lyman and Charles C. Rich of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles settled at what is now San Bernardino. The colony was the final settlement in a string of Mormon communities extending from Salt Lake City in an area known as Deseret. The community thrived, and on July 6,", "id": "22187256" }, { "contents": "Sunday School (LDS Church)\n\n\nout. On November 11, 1867, Young and church leaders Daniel H. Wells, George A. Smith, Wilford Woodruff, George Q. Cannon, and Brigham Young, Jr. met and organized the Parent Sunday School Union. Young appointed Cannon as the first general superintendent of the Sunday School, a position he would hold until his death in 1901. In 1872, the Sunday School organization was renamed the Deseret Sunday School Union. The organized Sunday School addressed lesson topics and source materials, grading, prizes and rewards, use of hymns", "id": "8671425" }, { "contents": "Hugh W. Pinnock\n\n\nHugh Wallace Pinnock (January 15, 1934 – December 16, 2000) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Pinnock was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Western States Mission. Pinnock graduated from University of Utah in 1958, where he became a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity and Owl and Key. Prior to his call to the First", "id": "8519001" }, { "contents": "Charles W. Penrose\n\n\nwas organized Penrose was called as a member of the high council. In 1877, Penrose became the assistant editor of the LDS Church-owned \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, working under George Q. Cannon. Penrose was known for his writing, including missionary tracts and lyrics of Latter-day Saint hymns, including \"God of Our Fathers\", \"O Ye Mountains High\", and \"Up, Awake, Ye Defenders of Zion\". In 1880, Penrose became the editor-in-chief of", "id": "2194239" }, { "contents": "Rulon S. Wells\n\n\nRulon Seymour Wells (July 7, 1854 – May 7, 1941) was a Utah politician and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1893 until his death. Wells was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to LDS Church leader Daniel H. Wells (1814–1891) and Louisa Free (1824–1886). In 1875, Wells travelled to Europe as a Mormon missionary and worked primarily in Germany and Switzerland. He returned to the United States in 1877. On", "id": "8315459" }, { "contents": "G. Homer Durham\n\n\nGeorge Homer Durham (February 4, 1911 – January 10, 1985) was an American academic administrator and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Durham was born in Parowan, Utah, and was raised in Salt Lake City. As a boy in grade school, he met and became lifelong friends with future LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley. As a young man, Durham served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the British", "id": "21588256" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nJonatana Napela or Jonathan Hawaii Napela (first name also spelled Iohatana, full name Napelakapuonamahanaonaleleonalani) (September 11, 1813 – August 6, 1879) was one of the earliest Hawaiian converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Hawaii, joining in the 1830s. He helped translate the Book of Mormon into the Hawaiian language, as \"Ka Buke a Moramona,\" working with missionary George Q. Cannon. Napela was appointed to serve as a superintendent of the colony at Kalaupapa, Molokai", "id": "16647246" }, { "contents": "Richfield, Utah\n\n\nserves about 600 students per year. As in most settled areas of rural Utah, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) plays a prominent role. The Mormons were highly industrious colonizers. From 1847, when they founded Salt Lake City, until 1877, they founded 360 towns. Following direction from Brigham Young, Latter-day Saints founded the town and outlying hamlets about 150 years ago. Members of the LDS Church are predominant among the residents. Even in this heart of Mormon country,", "id": "11082836" }, { "contents": "Marvin O. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Owen Ashton (April 8, 1883 – October 7, 1946) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1938 until his death. Prior to becoming a general authority, Ashton was a prominent local leader of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City, Utah. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Mormon parents. He married Rachel Grace Jeremy in 1906 and in 1907 went to England as a missionary for the LDS Church. He returned", "id": "14505232" }, { "contents": "LeGrand Richards\n\n\nLeGrand Richards (February 6, 1886 – January 11, 1983) was a prominent missionary and leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He served as the seventh presiding bishop of the LDS Church from 1938 to 1952, and was then called as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles by church president David O. McKay. Richards served in the Quorum of the Twelve until his death in Salt Lake City, Utah, at the age of 96. Richards was born in", "id": "2294374" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nwas educated at Lahainaluna School. Napela was trained as a lawyer. He was serving as a judge in Wailuku, Hawaii, when he met American George Q. Cannon, a member of the LDS Church on a missionary trip to Hawaii. After Napela's conversion in the 1830s to the LDS Church, the government forced the judge to resign from his position. The LDS Church was regarded with suspicion. LDS Church historian Andrew Jensen said that Napela \"did splendid missionary work for the Church.\" Napela was sent on a specific", "id": "16647248" }, { "contents": "Gardo House\n\n\ncounselor George Q. Cannon and other church leaders suggested that Taylor occupy the Gardo House after its completion, but he repeatedly refused. However, when church members unanimously voted on April 9, 1879, to make the Gardo House the official parsonage for LDS Church presidents, Taylor reluctantly accepted their decision. Moses Thatcher, William Jennings, and Angus M. Cannon were appointed as a committee to oversee completion of the mansion. On December 27, 1881, the Deseret News published a letter from John Taylor announcing a public reception and tour of", "id": "1496184" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nStates Mission of the church in 1901. In 1902, Grant married George J. Cannon. In 1923, Cannon was asked to succeed Mae Taylor Nystrom as the second counselor to Martha Horne Tingey, the general president of what was then called the Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Association. In 1929, when Ruth May Fox succeeded Tingey, Cannon was asked to be her first counselor. Cannon served in this capacity until 1929, when Fox was released and Cannon was selected by her father, who was President of the Church, to", "id": "1681854" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\n. (At the time, Cannon was a counselor to James E. Faust in the church's International Mission, which had jurisdiction over all areas of the world not otherwise part of a mission.) After Bateman and Cannon reported the results of their trip, Cannon and his wife were called and set apart as the first Mormon missionaries to black Africa. They—along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey—preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 35 branches and 5 districts of the LDS Church in Nigeria", "id": "9582826" }, { "contents": "Marion D. Hanks\n\n\nMarion Duff Hanks (October 13, 1921 – August 5, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1953 until his death. Hanks was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man he served in the Northern States Mission of the LDS Church, which was headquartered in Chicago. He was in the United States Navy during World War II and received a J.D. from the University of Utah. Prior to his call as a general authority", "id": "6558935" }, { "contents": "Lillie T. Freeze\n\n\nthe Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association (YLMIA). In this capacity, she was invited to speak at the Salt Lake Tabernacle on April 6, 1880, at a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the LDS Church's founding. In 1880, Lillie Freeze was one of the founding members of the LDS Church's Primary Association. Freeze was appointed as the first secretary of the general presidency, which was composed of Louie B. Felt, Matilda M. Barratt, and Clara C. M. Cannon. Freeze was secretary until 1888, when", "id": "10906695" }, { "contents": "Henry D. Taylor\n\n\nHenry Dixon Taylor (November 22, 1903 – February 24, 1987) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1958 until his death. Taylor was born in Provo, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Eastern States Mission. During his mission, Taylor was the president of the church's Connecticut District. Taylor received a bachelor's degree from Brigham Young University (BYU) and a master's degree", "id": "2477100" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas elected to be the non-voting delegate for Utah Territory in the United States Congress in 1872. He remained a congressional delegate until 1882, when his seat was declared vacant by the enactment of the Edmunds Act, which terminated many political and civil rights for Utah's Mormon polygamists. By 1880, Cannon had served four terms in Congress as Territorial Delegate. The newly appointed anti-Mormon territorial governor, Eli Houston Murray, openly supported the Liberal Party, which generally opposed church candidates. The 1880 territory-wide election", "id": "19825275" }, { "contents": "George F. Richards\n\n\nGeorge Franklin Richards (February 23, 1861 – August 8, 1950) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from April 9, 1906 until his death. He also served as Acting Presiding Patriarch of the LDS Church from 1937 to 1942 and President of the Quorum of the Twelve from May 25, 1945 until his death. Richards was born in Farmington, Utah Territory, the son of Franklin D. Richards and Nanny Longstroth. Richards", "id": "2194252" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\n1882, at the age of 23, Cannon assumed business control of the \"Juvenile Instructor\" and associated publications. He continued his management until his death. In October 1892, Cannon and his brother John Q. Cannon took control of the \"Deseret News\" publishing. He also became the editor and publisher of \"The Contributor\". On October 9, 1882, Cannon became a member of the First Seven Presidents of the Seventy of the church. On October 7, 1889, church president Wilford Woodruff named Cannon a member", "id": "9035316" }, { "contents": "Howard Cannon\n\n\nHis grandfather David Cannon, was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon, and a leading figure in the building of the St. George Temple, who was later the third president of that temple. His father Walter Cannon was one of David Cannon's 31 children. Howard's parents had married in 1909, his mother was Leah Sullivan. When Cannon was two years old his father left for England to served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for two years. Cannon went to Woodward School in", "id": "18060013" }, { "contents": "Mormon fiction\n\n\nMormons were generally non-fiction, including scripture, missionary tracts, and doctrinal literature. In 1844, Parley P. Pratt published what is commonly cited as the first work of LDS fiction, the didactic \"Dialogue between Joseph Smith and the Devil\". It was first published in the New York Herald. Early Mormon leaders like Brigham Young and George Q. Cannon condemned novels for wasting time, a rhetoric that persisted until the 1880s. Fiction among LDS Church members developed once the Mormons had settled in Utah and developed a degree of", "id": "453087" }, { "contents": "Marvin J. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Jeremy Ashton (May 6, 1915 – February 25, 1994) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1971 until his death. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was the son of Marvin O. Ashton, a local LDS leader, who later became a church general authority. The younger Ashton worked in the lumber business as a youth. He graduated from the University of Utah. He served a", "id": "19825413" }, { "contents": "Rudger Clawson\n\n\nRudger Judd Clawson (March 12, 1857 – June 21, 1943) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1898 until his death in 1943. He also served as President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1921 until his death and as a member of the First Presidency of the LDS Church for five days in 1901. Clawson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to Hiram Bradley Clawson and Margaret Judd", "id": "9035430" }, { "contents": "Utah-Idaho Sugar Company\n\n\npayment and a $130,000 loan. Cutler also went to Chicago and New York City to secure loans from banks; he came back, via train, with a bag full of money, as he did not think any banks in Utah could have cashed the large bank draft. The LDS church made more payments and secured more loans. In addition, George Q. Cannon and Heber J. Grant personally funded the enterprise. Joseph F. Smith, president of the LDS Church, gave a sermon in 1893 explaining that this was done to", "id": "1319991" }, { "contents": "President of the Church (LDS Church)\n\n\nthe President of the Quorum. When Woodruff died, his counselors returned to the Quorum based on the date they were ordained an apostle, placing George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith below Brigham Young Jr. and John Willard Young. Heber J. Grant objected to that arguing that seniority should be based on ordination to the Quorum rather than ordination as an apostle. Young argued that an apostle should not be demoted as long as he is worthy of the position. On March 31, 1900, Snow met with his counselors, Cannon and", "id": "16343191" }, { "contents": "Alfred W. McCune\n\n\n. Judge Orlando Powers, Associate Justice of the Utah Supreme Court, said in 1906 that he understood that McCune was not a Mormon. Frank J. Cannon, too, claimed McCune was not a Mormon, and B. H. Roberts, LDS Church historian and member of the First Council of the Seventy, said in 1930 that McCune was not a church member. Historian Orvin Malmquist, however, says that church records show he was baptized into the LDS Church at the age of eight in 1857, and that his marriage to Elizabeth", "id": "15062757" } ]
Joseph Jenne Cannon ( May 22 , 1877 -- November 5 , 1945 ) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ( LDS Church ) . He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family . As a young man , Cannon served as a for the LDS Church in Europe . He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in and [START_ENT] Moscow [END_ENT] which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903 . Lyman and Cannon also similarly dedicated Finland in 1903 . In the 1908 election , Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from . He served one term , from 1909 to 1911 . Cannon was not formally associated with any political party . From 1931 to 1934 , Cannon was the editor of the Deseret News , a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church . His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church 's British Mission . Cannon served in this capacity for three years , until 1937 . Immediately following his return to Utah , Cannon was asked to become the first assistant to George Q. Morris , the general superintendent of the church 's . Cannon served in this capacity until his death from pancreatic cancer
1af5b272-57f1-4298-967d-a8797b005bfe_Joseph_J._Canno:6
[{"answer": "Moscow", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "19004", "title": "Moscow"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nJoseph Jenne Cannon (May 22, 1877 – November 5, 1945) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Europe. He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in St. Petersburg and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903. Lyman and Cannon", "id": "13710370" }, { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nalso similarly dedicated Finland in 1903. In the 1908 election, Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. He served one term, from 1909 to 1911. Cannon was not formally associated with any political party. From 1931 to 1934, Cannon was the editor of the \"Deseret News\", a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church. His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church's British Mission. Cannon served in this", "id": "13710371" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nSylvester Quayle Cannon (June 10, 1877 – May 29, 1943) was an American businessman, engineer, and religious leader who served as the sixth presiding bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1925 to 1938 and a member of church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1939 until his death. He was the son of George Q. Cannon, an apostle and member of the church's First Presidency. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. He studied", "id": "2194372" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nJohn Quayle Cannon (April 19, 1857 – January 14, 1931) was an editor-in-chief of the \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, Utah, and a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He also served as a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army during the Spanish–American War. He was the son of LDS Church apostle George Q. Cannon and Elizabeth Hoagland. He was married to Elizabeth \"Annie\" Wells Cannon. Cannon", "id": "7202721" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nFrank Jenne Cannon (January 25, 1859July 25, 1933) was the first United States Senator from Utah, who served from 1896 to 1899. Born in Salt Lake City, he was the eldest child of Sarah Jenne Cannon and George Q. Cannon. His father was an Apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and later was a member of its First Presidency. After attending the school in Salt Lake City, he studied at University of Deseret, graduating at the age of 19", "id": "11000345" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nEdwin Quayle \"Ted\" Cannon, Jr. (May 6, 1918 – April 6, 2005) was a Utah politician and businessman and was a prominent leader and missionary in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was among the first missionaries in the LDS Church to preach to black people in Africa and was part of the first group missionaries sent to establish official congregations of the LDS Church in West Africa. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Edwin Q. Cannon,", "id": "9582822" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Ivins Cannon (March 9, 1920 – August 4, 2009) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1986 to 1991. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, Cannon was the son of George J. Cannon and Lucy Grant Cannon, a leader of the youth in the LDS Church. His maternal grandfather was Heber J. Grant, the seventh president of the LDS Church. His paternal grandfather was Abraham H. Cannon, who was a member of the church", "id": "8339578" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nLucy Grant Cannon (October 22, 1880 – May 7, 1966) was the fourth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1937 to 1948. She was a member of the general presidency of the Young Women from 1923 to 1948, serving as a counselor to two presidents. Lucy Grant was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Lucy Stringham and LDS Church apostle Heber J. Grant. She served as a church missionary in the Western", "id": "1681853" }, { "contents": "George Mousley Cannon\n\n\nTrust Company. He served as a delegate to the 1895 Utah State Constitutional Convention and chaired the committee which formulated the articles on taxation and public debt. In 1896, Cannon was elected to the Utah State Senate and served as its first president. When The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) modified stake boundaries in 1900, dividing the new Granite Stake off from the Salt Lake Stake, Cannon became the Sunday School Superintendent of the new stake. From 1901 until after 1930, Cannon served as", "id": "8629874" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nat the University of Utah and then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received a B.S. degree in mining engineering. In 1899, Cannon began an LDS Church mission in Belgium. Cannon then served from 1900 to 1902 as president of the church's Netherlands–Belgium Mission. Cannon also served as Francis M. Lyman's secretary on a three-month trip to many nations along the Mediterranean and in the Middle East. From 1916 to 1925, Cannon served as president of the Pioneer Stake in Salt Lake City. In", "id": "2194373" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\nAbraham Hoagland Cannon (also reported as Abram H. Cannon) (March 12, 1859 – July 19, 1896) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. His parents were George Q. Cannon, a Latter Day Saints apostle, and Elizabeth Hoagland, daughter of Abraham Hoagland. Cannon studied at Deseret University. Later, he studied architecture under Obed Taylor. Cannon married Sarah A.", "id": "9035314" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nSr. and Luella Wareing. He was born at his parents' home because of the 1918 influenza pandemic. Cannon's paternal grandfather was George Q. Cannon, a Mormon pioneer and prominent leader in the LDS Church. Cannon was raised in Salt Lake City. In 1937, Cannon went on a mission for the LDS Church to Nazi Germany. He was president of a branch of the church in Berlin in 1939 when the LDS Church evacuated its missionaries from Europe at the beginning of World War II. Cannon finished his mission in", "id": "9582823" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\n. Callville was submerged when Lake Mead was filled. In 1869 and 1870, Cannon served a second mission in the Eastern United States. In April 1876, Cannon became president of the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. He served in this position until April 1, 1904. After his time as stake president, Cannon served as a patriarch in the church. Cannon was the mayor of St. George, Utah Territory in 1861 and 1862. In 1896, after Utah had become a U.S. state, he stood for election", "id": "7202652" }, { "contents": "Donald Q. Cannon\n\n\nDonald Quayle Cannon (born 1936) is a retired professor at Brigham Young University who specializes in Mormon history, particularly early Mormon history and international Mormon history. As a young man, Cannon was a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Germany. Cannon earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Utah. Cannon holds a Ph.D. from Clark University. In the late 1960s, he taught at the University of Southern Maine. In the LDS Church he has", "id": "10057919" }, { "contents": "George Goddard (Mormon)\n\n\nwas the clerk to LDS Church presiding bishop Edward Hunter. From 1874 to 1884, Goddard was the clerk of the LDS Church's biannual general conferences. In 1872, Goddard became the inaugural first assistant to George Q. Cannon, the first superintendent of the Deseret Sunday School Union. Goddard served in this capacity for 26 years, until his death in 1899. Goddard was also a member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and a patriarch in the church. He died in Salt Lake City and was buried at Salt Lake City Cemetery.", "id": "7701639" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nuntil their arrival in Utah. In 1854, Cannon went on a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to the Eastern United States, where he assisted John Taylor in publishing a periodical entitled \"The Mormon\". He also preached and baptized in Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware. Cannon returned to Utah Territory due to the troubles connected with the Utah War. In 1864, Cannon helped establish Call's Landing on the Colorado River, later known as Callville, Nevada", "id": "7202651" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nJanath Russell Cannon (October 28, 1918 – July 5, 2007) was a counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was also a prominent missionary in the church and was among the first to preach to black people in Africa. Born in Ogden, Utah, Janath Russell was educated at Wellesley College. In 1941, she married Edwin Q. Cannon in the Salt Lake Temple. From 1971 to 1974,", "id": "9582964" }, { "contents": "Joseph A. Cannon\n\n\nserved as an assistant administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from 1983 to 1985. Joseph A. Cannon was born on July 31, 1949. Cannon served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Ireland, including on the Isle of Man, the ancestral homeland of the Cannons. Cannon received a degree in political science and, in 1977, a law degree from Brigham Young University. Cannon served as a law clerk in Salt Lake City for U.S. District", "id": "7202830" }, { "contents": "Elaine A. Cannon\n\n\nElaine Anderson Cannon (April 9, 1922 – May 19, 2003) was the eighth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 to 1984. Cannon has been a writer and an editor and is the author of over 50 books. Elaine Anderson was born to Aldon Joseph and Minnie Egan Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a teenager, she started writing a daily column aimed at teenagers for the \"Deseret News\". She", "id": "1682052" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nAdele Morris Cannon Howells (January 11, 1886 – April 14, 1951) was the fourth general president of the Primary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1943 until her death of rheumatic heart disease. She contributed to \"The Children's Friend\" magazine, as well as the fundraising for the Children's Primary Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. Adele Morris Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to George Mousley Cannon and Marian Adelaide Morris. She", "id": "1336419" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\nGeorgius Young Cannon (March 6, 1892 – March 29, 1987) was a 20th-century architect in the American West who operated principally out of Salt Lake City, Utah. Cannon trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), graduating in 1918. He then joined the army and later returned to Utah to intern with the architectural firm Ware & Treganza and Cannon & Fetzer. He served two missions to Germany for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). For a time", "id": "12786285" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Quayle Cannon (January 11, 1827 – April 12, 1901) was an early member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), and served in the First Presidency under four successive presidents of the church: Brigham Young, John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. He was the church's chief political strategist, and was dubbed \"the Mormon premier\" and \"the Mormon Richelieu\" by the press. He was also a five", "id": "19825263" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nwas the oldest of nine children, and her father George Cannon was the first president of the Utah State Senate. As a child, Cannon suffered from rheumatic fever. She enjoyed reading in her spare time and horseback riding. She was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Cannon attended schools in Salt Lake City and graduated from the LDS High School and Business College in 1903. She attended the University of Utah and studied physical education and graduated with her bachelor's degree in 1909. Cannon", "id": "1336420" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nis one of the few general authorities of the LDS Church to have been excommunicated. From 1889 until 1892, Cannon was the editor of the \"Ogden Standard\". From October 1892 until April 1898, he was the editor in chief of the \"Deseret News\". After the Spanish–American War he returned to work at the \"Deseret News\" and served as an executive editor of the newspaper off-and-on until his death. He was much beloved by his co-workers. Cannon was a member", "id": "7202722" }, { "contents": "Tracy Y. Cannon\n\n\nLatter-day Saints. In 1939, he was made second assistant to Melvin J. Ballard, supervisor of the committee. From 1915 to 1927, Cannon was a member of the high council of the Pioneer Stake of the LDS Church. In 1917, he became a member of the Deseret Sunday School Union General Board. From 1930 through 1936, Cannon was bishop of the Cannon Ward in Salt Lake City. Cannon was an editor of the 1927 LDS Church hymnal. In 1925, Cannon was appointed director of the McCune School", "id": "12019030" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe church's Welsh-language periodical, \"Udgorn Seion\". From 1867 to 1874, Cannon was the managing editor of the \"Deseret News\". It was under his direction that the newspaper was first published on a daily basis. In 1866, Cannon began publication of a magazine for youth and young adult Latter-day Saints called \"The Juvenile Instructor\". He owned and published this magazine until his death; in 1901 his family sold the magazine to the LDS Church's Sunday School organization. The periodical was", "id": "19825272" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nCannon and her husband were heads of the Switzerland Mission of the LDS Church. Upon their return to Utah in 1974, Cannon became the first counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the church's Relief Society. Cannon served in this capacity until 1978, when she was released so that she and her husband could become the first missionaries of the church to preach in \"black Africa\". They — along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey — preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 27", "id": "9582965" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\nan LDS Church organization responsible for educating young members of the LDS church, and the magazine was the first church periodical oriented toward youth. Cannon opened the George Q. Cannon & Sons bookstore in 1867 to sell the magazine and other publications of an uplifting nature. Cannon believed that secular novels did not reflect Latter-day Saint values. In the 1880s, Cannon expanded with a branch in Ogden, Utah. It is not known how many books Cannon & Sons actually published itself. In this era, authors commonly self-published", "id": "18344085" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n. Cannon was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. Cannon fathered 32 children, some of whom are Abraham H. Cannon, John Q. Cannon, and Sylvester Q. Cannon, who all became general authorities of the LDS Church; Frank J. Cannon, Utah's first U.S. Senator; and Lewis T. Cannon and Georgius Y. Cannon, prominent architects in Utah. Some of Cannon's prominent descendants include Howard Cannon, U.S. Senator from Nevada from 1959 to 1983 and Chris Cannon, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1997 to", "id": "19825281" }, { "contents": "Salt Lake City Council Hall\n\n\nwho was then the official architect for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Built at First South and 120 East (more on Salt Lake City's coordinate system), sandstone for the structure was delivered from Red Butte Canyon on Utah's first chartered railroad. The well-furnished Greek revival building was completed at a cost of $70,000. In January 1866, City Hall was dedicated by George Q. Cannon, a prominent LDS leader. Many other LDS leaders attended the dedication including Brigham", "id": "19382830" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\n, Cannon moved to Los Angeles and worked as the office manager of his MIT schoolmate Wallace Neff. He later returned to Utah and designed numerous buildings, mostly residences, and some of which remain on the National Register of Historic Places. Among his works were meetinghouses of the LDS Church and other civic buildings. Cannon served on a church-appointed board of six architects that oversaw the construction of the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple. Cannon was the youngest of 32 children born to LDS Church leader George Q. Cannon. His mother,", "id": "12786286" }, { "contents": "Karl G. Maeser\n\n\nin the General Superintendency of the Deseret Sunday School Union. He was the Second Assistant to General Superintendent George Q. Cannon from July 1894 to January 1899. He then served as the First Assistant to Cannon from January 1899 until February 1901. Maeser also participated in the Utah constitutional convention after Abraham Smoot's death in 1895. He proposed an article to support prohibition, but later backed down. Missionaries from the LDS Church were removed from California in 1858 due to the Utah War. Missionary work resumed in 1892. Maeser presided over", "id": "11030473" }, { "contents": "Frank B. Woodbury\n\n\nFrank Bartlett Woodbury (December 27, 1867 – December 21, 1962) was a leader of and an Acting Presiding Patriarch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), one of only three church members to hold this position in church history. Born in St. George, Utah Territory, to Orin Nelson Woodbury and Ann Cannon, Woodbury served in many capacities in the church on a local level. Some, but not all, LDS Church sources list Woodbury as \"Acting Presiding Patriarch\" of", "id": "8238754" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand 1958 and served three full terms. From 1964 to 1971, Cannon was a bishop of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. From 1971 to 1974, he was the president of the Switzerland Mission of the church. In 1978, three weeks after the LDS Church announced that it would no longer impose restrictions of black people receiving the priesthood or participating in temple ordinances, Cannon traveled to Africa on behalf of the church with Merrill J. Bateman to assess the prospects for church missionary work and growth in \"black Africa\"", "id": "9582825" }, { "contents": "Amasa Lyman\n\n\n). Lyman served as the first mayor of San Bernardino. In 1860, Young appointed three of the twelve apostles—Lyman, Charles C. Rich, and George Q. Cannon—to the presidency of the church's European Mission. On March 16, 1862, Lyman preached a sermon in Dundee, Scotland, which all but denied the reality of and the necessity for the atonement of Jesus Christ, which is a central tenet of the LDS Church. His speech appeared to have been overlooked for years, but on January 21", "id": "12068047" }, { "contents": "Mark E. Petersen\n\n\nMark Edward Petersen (November 7, 1900 – January 11, 1984) was an American news editor and religious leader who served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1944 until his death. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, he filled the vacancy in the Quorum caused by the excommunication of Richard R. Lyman. Petersen had become managing editor of the church-owned \"Deseret News\" in 1935 and editor in 1941.", "id": "2692480" }, { "contents": "Thomas C. Griggs\n\n\nthe LDS Church's Aaronic priesthood; his call to this office was given by Apostle George Q. Cannon. With the outbreak of the American Civil War, the Griggs heeded the counsel of LDS Church leaders to move to Utah Territory. The Griggs crossed the plains in Joseph Horne's Mormon pioneer company in 1861. Griggs first joined the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in 1866 when Charles John Thomas was the director. Griggs would continue as a member of the choir until his death in 1903. While Robert Sands was the conductor of the choir", "id": "9481149" }, { "contents": "Charles Clarence Neslen\n\n\nfrom Germany and he was imprisoned in Danzig. He served as president of the Königsberg District of the LDS Church for a part of his mission. Neslen was a member of the Democratic Party and a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1912. Neslen worked a total of 15 years for the \"Deseret News\". He was also a realtor and for a time served as secretary of the Salt Lake Real Estate Association. On October 26, 1905, Neslen married Grace T. Cannon, a daughter of George Q. Cannon.", "id": "21092533" }, { "contents": "Stephen L. Chipman\n\n\nStephen L. Chipman (1864–1945) was a member of the Utah State Legislature in 1903 and a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Utah County. He was also the first president of the Salt Lake Temple who was not also an apostle in the LDS Church. Chipman studied at Brigham Young Academy (the predecessor of Brigham Young University (BYU)) as a youth. From 1885 to 1887 he served as a Mormon missionary in the Southern States Mission of the LDS Church", "id": "15228384" }, { "contents": "Mountain Meadows massacre and Mormon public relations\n\n\nCannon, then president of the LDS California Mission. In the October 13, 1857 edition of Cannon's San Francisco newspaper \"The Western Standard\", Cannon responded to initial news reports of involvement by Mormons by charging the responsible journalists with writing \"reckless and malignant slanders\", despite knowing that the southern Utah Mormons were \"as innocent of [the massacre] as the child unborn\". The church's official newspaper in Salt Lake City, \"The Deseret News\", was initially slow to comment on the massacre,", "id": "22212632" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas the second-most senior apostle of the church after the death of Woodruff, Cannon did not become President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, as would be the practice in the LDS Church today. Rather, because Cannon was a member of the First Presidency, the church simply appointed the next senior apostle of the church—Brigham Young, Jr.—to be the quorum president. (Under today's practices, Cannon would have been appointed the president of the quorum and Young would have been appointed acting president.) Cannon", "id": "19825274" }, { "contents": "Clifford E. Young\n\n\nClifford Earle Young (December 7, 1883 – August 21, 1958) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1941 until his death. Young was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, the son of LDS Church leader Seymour B. Young. From 1905 to 1908, he served as a Mormon missionary in England and Germany. In 1928, Young became the president of the Alpine Stake of the LDS Church in Utah. In 1934, he joined the", "id": "8315768" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n33. Upon his joining the Quorum of the Twelve, Cannon was called to preside over the church's European Mission. Cannon's mission in Europe ended when he was recalled by Young in 1862 to work in Washington, D.C., to assist in the church's promotion of Utah Territory's bid for statehood. At the adjournment of the 1862 congressional session, Cannon again left for Europe to preside over the mission. In this capacity, Cannon was the editor of the \"Millennial Star\" and, for a short time,", "id": "19825271" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nfrom the federal authorities. In September 1888, Cannon surrendered himself and pleaded guilty at trial to charges of unlawful cohabitation under the Edmunds Act. As a result, Cannon served nearly six months in Utah's federal penitentiary. Cannon was pardoned in 1894 by U.S. President Grover Cleveland. Cannon died on April 12, 1901, in Monterey, California, at 74 years of age. Had he lived a few months longer, he would have become the President of the LDS Church: Lorenzo Snow died on October 10 of that year", "id": "19825280" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Isle of Man\n\n\nand Idaho which descends from the 19th century marriage of George Cannon and Ann Quayle before their emigration from Peel, Isle of Man. The family's most notable member was their oldest son George Quayle Cannon. The family is connected by marriage to the Bennion, Taylor, Wells and Young political families. LDS Membership statistics as of January 1, 2011 for the Isle of Man. The nation of the Isle of Man does not have its own mission. Instead it is served by an English mission. Five out of the six", "id": "7797107" }, { "contents": "The Contributor (LDS magazine)\n\n\nThe Contributor was an independent publication associated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) between 1879 and 1896. It was a monthly periodical and sought to represent the Young Men's and Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Associations (YMMIA and YLMIA respectively), the youth organizations of the LDS Church at the time. It was founded by Junius F. Wells, the inaugural head of the YMMIA. Abraham H. Cannon became editor when the magazine was purchased by the Cannon Publishing Company in 1892. With the", "id": "505110" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe official organ of the Sunday School until 1930, when it was replaced with \"The Instructor\". Cannon also served as the first general superintendent of the church's Sunday School from 1867 until his death. On April 8, 1873, Cannon became a member of the church's First Presidency when he was called as the first counselor by Brigham Young. Cannon went on to serve as counselor to three more presidents of the church: he was First Counselor to John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. Although Cannon", "id": "19825273" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\ntogether. Prior to her service in the general Primary presidency, Clara Cannon was a counselor in the presidencies of the Primary and Relief Society in the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. When Louie B. Felt became the first general presidency of the Primary, Matilda M. Barratt and Cannon were selected as Felt's counselors. Cannon was a counselor until 1895; the next year she was succeeded in the position by Josephine R. West. Clara Moses Cannon died of throat cancer in Centerville, Utah, aged 87 and was interred in", "id": "10663424" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nScouts of America and served in the organization's Great Salt Lake Council. Prior to his call as a general authority, Cannon served in the church as a bishop, stake president, patriarch, temple sealer, and regional representative. He was also the president of the church's Central British Mission from 1966 to 1969. From 1969 to 1972, Cannon was an assistant and counselor to W. Jay Eldredge, the general superintendent of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association. Cannon became a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy", "id": "8339580" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe Nauvoo Legion. During this time, Cannon served as printer of the \"Deseret News\" while it was publishing in exile in Fillmore, Utah. After the Utah War, he was called as president of the church's Eastern States Mission. The murder of Parley P. Pratt in 1857 created a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. That vacancy was not filled until Brigham Young called Cannon to the apostleship three years later. Cannon was ordained to the priesthood office of apostle on August 26, 1860, at age", "id": "19825270" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nin the Sandwich Islands (later known as the Kingdom of Hawaii), where he served for four years. While in the islands, Cannon converted many Native Hawaiians. One of the most notable was Jonatana Napela, who assisted Cannon in translating the Book of Mormon into Hawaiian. Joseph F. Smith, a future church president, would follow Cannon and serve in Hawaii one year later. Returning to Utah Territory, Cannon married Elizabeth Hoagland (daughter of Abraham Hoagland and his wife.) He was almost immediately called to assist apostle", "id": "19825268" }, { "contents": "Ronald E. Poelman\n\n\nRonald Eugene Poelman (May 10, 1928 – November 19, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 until his death. In 1984, he delivered a controversial sermon in the LDS Church's general conference which the church redacted before publishing. Poelman was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to a Latter-day Saint family. As a young man, he served as a Mormon missionary in the LDS Church's Netherlands Mission. He began his", "id": "4765396" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\n. He would marry Martha Brown of Ogden in 1878. In 1891 he helped to organize the Utah Republican Party. After a failed bid to become delegate from the Utah Territory, he succeeded and served from March 4, 1895, to January 4, 1896. Cannon was chosen in 1896 to serve as senator by the Utah Legislature in spite of LDS church leadership favoring his father for the job. He served in the United States Senate, initially, as a member of the Republican Party; however, he later became a", "id": "11000346" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nmember of the Silver Republican Party, founded by his successor (and future employer at \"The Salt Lake Tribune\") Thomas Kearns. Cannon lost re-election in 1899. Utah's state legislators indicated they would not support Cannon for re-election shortly after the November 1898 elections. Cannon had voted against the Dingley Act, which would have raised tariffs on sugar and helped the Utah sugar industry. It was strongly supported by the LDS Church hierarchy, who now opposed his re-election. Other factors were his support", "id": "11000347" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand Ghana. The first convert baptized in Africa was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and his wife were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' centre in Nauvoo, Illinois. For three months in 1989, Cannon was the interim president of the LDS Church's Germany Hamburg Mission; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. After his interim service as mission president, Cannon was the second president of the Frankfurt Germany Temple from 1989 to", "id": "9582827" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nCounselor to William B. Preston, the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church; he served in this position between 1884 and 1886. In 1884, shortly after Cannon had become a general authority, a sensationalized news story by Joseph Lippman in the \"Salt Lake Tribune\" alleged that Cannon had taken his wife's sister Louie Wells as a plural wife. Lippman suggested that Cannon and Wells had been married in the Logan Temple. In fact, there had been no such marriage, though it was later revealed that Cannon and Wells had", "id": "7202724" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nbranches of the LDS Church in Nigeria and Ghana. The first convert baptized in Nigeria was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and her husband were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' center in Nauvoo, Illinois. In 1989, they served as interim leaders of the Germany Hamburg Mission of the church; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. From 1989 to 1992, Cannon was the matron of the Frankfurt Germany Temple while her husband", "id": "9582966" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\n's Quorum of the Twelve. Abraham was a son of George Q. Cannon, an early member of the church's First Presidency. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary in the church's Central States Mission. After his mission, he served in the United States Air Force during the Second World War. In 1946, he began attending Brigham Young University (BYU). After graduating from BYU, Cannon became a vice president of Beneficial Life Insurance Company in Salt Lake City. He was active in the Boy", "id": "8339579" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\n1925, Cannon became the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church, succeeding Charles W. Nibley. Cannon's counselors were David A. Smith and John Wells. In 1938, Cannon was released as Presiding Bishop and was succeeded by LeGrand Richards. At the same time, Cannon was ordained an apostle and made an \"associate\" of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, a unique position that had never been filled before. When Quorum member Melvin J. Ballard died the next year, Cannon became a full member of the Quorum; he served", "id": "2194374" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\nClarissa Cordelia (\"Clara\") Moses Cannon (April 21, 1839 – August 21, 1926) was a Mormon pioneer and a member of the first-ever general presidency of the Primary organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). She was the second counselor to general president Louie B. Felt from 1880 to 1895. Clara Moses was born in Westfield, Massachusetts. In 1846 she took the six-month journey on the ship \"Brooklyn\" from New York City to San", "id": "10663422" }, { "contents": "Leonora Cannon Taylor\n\n\nLeonora Cannon Taylor (October 6, 1796–December 9, 1868) was a member of the Relief Society organization at the time of its origin and the first wife of John Taylor, the third president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). On October 6, 1796 in Peel, Isle of Man, Leonora Cannon was born to George Cannon and Leonora Callister. As the oldest daughter in the family, when Leonora's father died when she was thirteen she went away to London to work", "id": "16190675" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\ntheir books, which were then distributed by others. However, Cannon & Sons distributed several important books through their stores and mail order (see table). The company had extensive ties to the LDS Church-owned newspaper, the \"Deseret News.\" Five of Cannon's sons held important positions in the paper, and Cannon himself was editor between 1867 and 1872, and again while temporarily owning the paper from 1892 to 1898. Nearly every George Q. Cannon & Sons book was printed on the \"Deseret News\" press", "id": "18344086" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nof the Utah Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Cannon was the oldest son of George Q. Cannon and the one most expected to follow in his prominent father's footsteps in politics, church office, and journalism. Heber J. Grant once said of Cannon: \"There probably is not a young man in the church who had had more opportunities and advantages extended to him educationally, spiritually, and every other way than John Q. Cannon.\" At the age of 27, Cannon was called to serve as the Second", "id": "7202723" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nMartha Maria \"Mattie\" Hughes Cannon (July 1, 1857 – July 10, 1932) was a Welsh-born immigrant to the United States, a polygamous wife, physician, Utah women's rights advocate and suffragist, and Utah State Senator. Her family immigrated to the United States as converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and traveled West to settle in Utah territory with other Mormons. She started working at the age of fourteen. At sixteen she enrolled in the University", "id": "15993465" }, { "contents": "Church Office Building\n\n\nThe Church Office Building is a 28-story building in Salt Lake City, Utah, which houses the administrative support staff for the lay ministry of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) throughout the world. The building is 420 ft (128 m) tall at roof level and is located within the Temple Square complex on the corner of North Temple and State Street. The building was designed by George Cannon Young at a cost of US$31 million to build. Construction took place from 1962 to 1972", "id": "13754819" }, { "contents": "John Lyman Smith\n\n\nJohn Lyman Smith (November 17, 1828 – February 21, 1898) was an American politician and Mormon missionary. He served as a member of the Utah Territory's Legislative Assembly's House of Representatives for Iron County, Utah, from 1852 to 1853, and the Great Salt Lake County, Utah, from 1853 to 1855. Cousin of the founder of the Latter Day Saint Movement, Joseph Smith, Smith was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) who traveled to the", "id": "18219861" }, { "contents": "Francis M. Lyman\n\n\nFrancis Marion Lyman (January 12, 1840 – November 18, 1916) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was the President of the Quorum from 1903 until his death. Lyman's father and son were also apostles in the church: his father was Amasa M. Lyman and his son was Richard R. Lyman. Both his father and son were excommunicated from the church while serving as apostles. Francis M. Lyman was born as", "id": "20761093" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nAngus Munn Cannon (May 17, 1834 – June 7, 1915) was an early Latter Day Saint leader and Mormon pioneer. Cannon was born in Liverpool, Lancashire, England. His Manx parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 1840, being baptized by his uncle John Taylor. In 1842, the Cannon family went to Nauvoo, Illinois, United States. By 1849, they were in Utah Territory. Cannon was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon and their lives followed very similar paths up", "id": "7202650" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\naffairs while Taylor recovered. This training would serve him well in later life. Cannon's father died in 1845. In 1846, Taylor traveled to England to organize the affairs of the church after Smith's death. Meanwhile, Cannon accompanied Taylor's wife and family as they moved to Winter Quarters, Nebraska. When Taylor returned, Cannon traveled with the entire Taylor family to the Salt Lake Valley, arriving in October 1847. In 1849, Cannon was asked by church president Brigham Young to serve as a missionary for the church", "id": "19825267" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nstaying in the position until December 31, 1903. Cannon attempted to prohibit children not vaccinated from attending school in case of a disease outbreak. The Board of Health sent out vaccines; however, the \"Deseret News\" spread information that vaccines weren't safe. LDS Church leaders were divided on the subject. One apostle, Brigham Young Jr. was very vocal in his opinions, writing in the \"Deseret News\" about the evils of vaccinations. The influence of the \"Deseret News\" and Mormon religious leaders limited how many", "id": "15993490" }, { "contents": "Billy Johnson (Mormon)\n\n\nLDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball announced Official Declaration 2 which extended the priesthood to all worthy male members of the church regardless of race or color. In gratitude, Johnson sent a letter to Kimball, explaining that God had prepared the people in Ghana, asking him to send missionaries to the members. Kimball responded to his pleas and sent the first called missionaries Rendell N. Mabey and Rachel Mabey. They joined Edwin Q. Cannon and Janath R. Cannon. Johnson was finally baptized into the LDS Church on December 9, 1978. He", "id": "4108521" }, { "contents": "Juvenile Instructor\n\n\ncatechisms on the Bible, Book of Mormon, and Doctrine and Covenants; musical compositions; illustrations; stories; editorial teachings; and other aids to gospel instruction. It was the first magazine for children published in the United States west of the Mississippi River. For much of its history, \"The Juvenile Instructor\" was owned by the Cannon family. Its first editor was George Q. Cannon, an apostle in the LDS Church. Cannon and his family continued to publish the magazine privately until January 1, 1901, when the", "id": "9210614" }, { "contents": "Joseph F. Smith\n\n\nand as second counselor to Lorenzo Snow (1898–1901). Smith was appointed first counselor to Snow on the death of first counselor George Q. Cannon, but, as Snow himself died only four days later, Smith never served in that position. He succeeded Snow as president of the LDS Church and president of the Salt Lake Temple. He served as president of the temple until 1911, when he transferred the responsibility to Anthon H. Lund. Smith also served as editor of the \"Improvement Era\" and \"Juvenile Instructor\",", "id": "4117444" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in California\n\n\nQ. Cannon began publication in San Francisco of the \"Western Standard\", a weekly periodical supportive of the Church. The first colonization from Utah to California came in 1851 when a company of about 450 saints and slaves under direction of Elders Amasa M. Lyman and Charles C. Rich of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles settled at what is now San Bernardino. The colony was the final settlement in a string of Mormon communities extending from Salt Lake City in an area known as Deseret. The community thrived, and on July 6,", "id": "22187256" }, { "contents": "Sunday School (LDS Church)\n\n\nout. On November 11, 1867, Young and church leaders Daniel H. Wells, George A. Smith, Wilford Woodruff, George Q. Cannon, and Brigham Young, Jr. met and organized the Parent Sunday School Union. Young appointed Cannon as the first general superintendent of the Sunday School, a position he would hold until his death in 1901. In 1872, the Sunday School organization was renamed the Deseret Sunday School Union. The organized Sunday School addressed lesson topics and source materials, grading, prizes and rewards, use of hymns", "id": "8671425" }, { "contents": "Hugh W. Pinnock\n\n\nHugh Wallace Pinnock (January 15, 1934 – December 16, 2000) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Pinnock was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Western States Mission. Pinnock graduated from University of Utah in 1958, where he became a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity and Owl and Key. Prior to his call to the First", "id": "8519001" }, { "contents": "Charles W. Penrose\n\n\nwas organized Penrose was called as a member of the high council. In 1877, Penrose became the assistant editor of the LDS Church-owned \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, working under George Q. Cannon. Penrose was known for his writing, including missionary tracts and lyrics of Latter-day Saint hymns, including \"God of Our Fathers\", \"O Ye Mountains High\", and \"Up, Awake, Ye Defenders of Zion\". In 1880, Penrose became the editor-in-chief of", "id": "2194239" }, { "contents": "Rulon S. Wells\n\n\nRulon Seymour Wells (July 7, 1854 – May 7, 1941) was a Utah politician and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1893 until his death. Wells was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to LDS Church leader Daniel H. Wells (1814–1891) and Louisa Free (1824–1886). In 1875, Wells travelled to Europe as a Mormon missionary and worked primarily in Germany and Switzerland. He returned to the United States in 1877. On", "id": "8315459" }, { "contents": "G. Homer Durham\n\n\nGeorge Homer Durham (February 4, 1911 – January 10, 1985) was an American academic administrator and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Durham was born in Parowan, Utah, and was raised in Salt Lake City. As a boy in grade school, he met and became lifelong friends with future LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley. As a young man, Durham served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the British", "id": "21588256" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nJonatana Napela or Jonathan Hawaii Napela (first name also spelled Iohatana, full name Napelakapuonamahanaonaleleonalani) (September 11, 1813 – August 6, 1879) was one of the earliest Hawaiian converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Hawaii, joining in the 1830s. He helped translate the Book of Mormon into the Hawaiian language, as \"Ka Buke a Moramona,\" working with missionary George Q. Cannon. Napela was appointed to serve as a superintendent of the colony at Kalaupapa, Molokai", "id": "16647246" }, { "contents": "Richfield, Utah\n\n\nserves about 600 students per year. As in most settled areas of rural Utah, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) plays a prominent role. The Mormons were highly industrious colonizers. From 1847, when they founded Salt Lake City, until 1877, they founded 360 towns. Following direction from Brigham Young, Latter-day Saints founded the town and outlying hamlets about 150 years ago. Members of the LDS Church are predominant among the residents. Even in this heart of Mormon country,", "id": "11082836" }, { "contents": "Marvin O. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Owen Ashton (April 8, 1883 – October 7, 1946) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1938 until his death. Prior to becoming a general authority, Ashton was a prominent local leader of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City, Utah. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Mormon parents. He married Rachel Grace Jeremy in 1906 and in 1907 went to England as a missionary for the LDS Church. He returned", "id": "14505232" }, { "contents": "LeGrand Richards\n\n\nLeGrand Richards (February 6, 1886 – January 11, 1983) was a prominent missionary and leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He served as the seventh presiding bishop of the LDS Church from 1938 to 1952, and was then called as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles by church president David O. McKay. Richards served in the Quorum of the Twelve until his death in Salt Lake City, Utah, at the age of 96. Richards was born in", "id": "2294374" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nwas educated at Lahainaluna School. Napela was trained as a lawyer. He was serving as a judge in Wailuku, Hawaii, when he met American George Q. Cannon, a member of the LDS Church on a missionary trip to Hawaii. After Napela's conversion in the 1830s to the LDS Church, the government forced the judge to resign from his position. The LDS Church was regarded with suspicion. LDS Church historian Andrew Jensen said that Napela \"did splendid missionary work for the Church.\" Napela was sent on a specific", "id": "16647248" }, { "contents": "Gardo House\n\n\ncounselor George Q. Cannon and other church leaders suggested that Taylor occupy the Gardo House after its completion, but he repeatedly refused. However, when church members unanimously voted on April 9, 1879, to make the Gardo House the official parsonage for LDS Church presidents, Taylor reluctantly accepted their decision. Moses Thatcher, William Jennings, and Angus M. Cannon were appointed as a committee to oversee completion of the mansion. On December 27, 1881, the Deseret News published a letter from John Taylor announcing a public reception and tour of", "id": "1496184" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nStates Mission of the church in 1901. In 1902, Grant married George J. Cannon. In 1923, Cannon was asked to succeed Mae Taylor Nystrom as the second counselor to Martha Horne Tingey, the general president of what was then called the Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Association. In 1929, when Ruth May Fox succeeded Tingey, Cannon was asked to be her first counselor. Cannon served in this capacity until 1929, when Fox was released and Cannon was selected by her father, who was President of the Church, to", "id": "1681854" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\n. (At the time, Cannon was a counselor to James E. Faust in the church's International Mission, which had jurisdiction over all areas of the world not otherwise part of a mission.) After Bateman and Cannon reported the results of their trip, Cannon and his wife were called and set apart as the first Mormon missionaries to black Africa. They—along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey—preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 35 branches and 5 districts of the LDS Church in Nigeria", "id": "9582826" }, { "contents": "Marion D. Hanks\n\n\nMarion Duff Hanks (October 13, 1921 – August 5, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1953 until his death. Hanks was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man he served in the Northern States Mission of the LDS Church, which was headquartered in Chicago. He was in the United States Navy during World War II and received a J.D. from the University of Utah. Prior to his call as a general authority", "id": "6558935" }, { "contents": "Lillie T. Freeze\n\n\nthe Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association (YLMIA). In this capacity, she was invited to speak at the Salt Lake Tabernacle on April 6, 1880, at a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the LDS Church's founding. In 1880, Lillie Freeze was one of the founding members of the LDS Church's Primary Association. Freeze was appointed as the first secretary of the general presidency, which was composed of Louie B. Felt, Matilda M. Barratt, and Clara C. M. Cannon. Freeze was secretary until 1888, when", "id": "10906695" }, { "contents": "Henry D. Taylor\n\n\nHenry Dixon Taylor (November 22, 1903 – February 24, 1987) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1958 until his death. Taylor was born in Provo, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Eastern States Mission. During his mission, Taylor was the president of the church's Connecticut District. Taylor received a bachelor's degree from Brigham Young University (BYU) and a master's degree", "id": "2477100" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas elected to be the non-voting delegate for Utah Territory in the United States Congress in 1872. He remained a congressional delegate until 1882, when his seat was declared vacant by the enactment of the Edmunds Act, which terminated many political and civil rights for Utah's Mormon polygamists. By 1880, Cannon had served four terms in Congress as Territorial Delegate. The newly appointed anti-Mormon territorial governor, Eli Houston Murray, openly supported the Liberal Party, which generally opposed church candidates. The 1880 territory-wide election", "id": "19825275" }, { "contents": "George F. Richards\n\n\nGeorge Franklin Richards (February 23, 1861 – August 8, 1950) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from April 9, 1906 until his death. He also served as Acting Presiding Patriarch of the LDS Church from 1937 to 1942 and President of the Quorum of the Twelve from May 25, 1945 until his death. Richards was born in Farmington, Utah Territory, the son of Franklin D. Richards and Nanny Longstroth. Richards", "id": "2194252" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\n1882, at the age of 23, Cannon assumed business control of the \"Juvenile Instructor\" and associated publications. He continued his management until his death. In October 1892, Cannon and his brother John Q. Cannon took control of the \"Deseret News\" publishing. He also became the editor and publisher of \"The Contributor\". On October 9, 1882, Cannon became a member of the First Seven Presidents of the Seventy of the church. On October 7, 1889, church president Wilford Woodruff named Cannon a member", "id": "9035316" }, { "contents": "Howard Cannon\n\n\nHis grandfather David Cannon, was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon, and a leading figure in the building of the St. George Temple, who was later the third president of that temple. His father Walter Cannon was one of David Cannon's 31 children. Howard's parents had married in 1909, his mother was Leah Sullivan. When Cannon was two years old his father left for England to served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for two years. Cannon went to Woodward School in", "id": "18060013" }, { "contents": "Mormon fiction\n\n\nMormons were generally non-fiction, including scripture, missionary tracts, and doctrinal literature. In 1844, Parley P. Pratt published what is commonly cited as the first work of LDS fiction, the didactic \"Dialogue between Joseph Smith and the Devil\". It was first published in the New York Herald. Early Mormon leaders like Brigham Young and George Q. Cannon condemned novels for wasting time, a rhetoric that persisted until the 1880s. Fiction among LDS Church members developed once the Mormons had settled in Utah and developed a degree of", "id": "453087" }, { "contents": "Marvin J. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Jeremy Ashton (May 6, 1915 – February 25, 1994) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1971 until his death. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was the son of Marvin O. Ashton, a local LDS leader, who later became a church general authority. The younger Ashton worked in the lumber business as a youth. He graduated from the University of Utah. He served a", "id": "19825413" }, { "contents": "Rudger Clawson\n\n\nRudger Judd Clawson (March 12, 1857 – June 21, 1943) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1898 until his death in 1943. He also served as President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1921 until his death and as a member of the First Presidency of the LDS Church for five days in 1901. Clawson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to Hiram Bradley Clawson and Margaret Judd", "id": "9035430" }, { "contents": "Utah-Idaho Sugar Company\n\n\npayment and a $130,000 loan. Cutler also went to Chicago and New York City to secure loans from banks; he came back, via train, with a bag full of money, as he did not think any banks in Utah could have cashed the large bank draft. The LDS church made more payments and secured more loans. In addition, George Q. Cannon and Heber J. Grant personally funded the enterprise. Joseph F. Smith, president of the LDS Church, gave a sermon in 1893 explaining that this was done to", "id": "1319991" }, { "contents": "President of the Church (LDS Church)\n\n\nthe President of the Quorum. When Woodruff died, his counselors returned to the Quorum based on the date they were ordained an apostle, placing George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith below Brigham Young Jr. and John Willard Young. Heber J. Grant objected to that arguing that seniority should be based on ordination to the Quorum rather than ordination as an apostle. Young argued that an apostle should not be demoted as long as he is worthy of the position. On March 31, 1900, Snow met with his counselors, Cannon and", "id": "16343191" }, { "contents": "Alfred W. McCune\n\n\n. Judge Orlando Powers, Associate Justice of the Utah Supreme Court, said in 1906 that he understood that McCune was not a Mormon. Frank J. Cannon, too, claimed McCune was not a Mormon, and B. H. Roberts, LDS Church historian and member of the First Council of the Seventy, said in 1930 that McCune was not a church member. Historian Orvin Malmquist, however, says that church records show he was baptized into the LDS Church at the age of eight in 1857, and that his marriage to Elizabeth", "id": "15062757" } ]
Joseph Jenne Cannon ( May 22 , 1877 -- November 5 , 1945 ) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ( LDS Church ) . He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family . As a young man , Cannon served as a for the LDS Church in Europe . He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in and Moscow which dedicated [START_ENT] Russia [END_ENT] for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903 . Lyman and Cannon also similarly dedicated Finland in 1903 . In the 1908 election , Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from . He served one term , from 1909 to 1911 . Cannon was not formally associated with any political party . From 1931 to 1934 , Cannon was the editor of the Deseret News , a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church . His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church 's British Mission . Cannon served in this capacity for three years , until 1937 . Immediately following his return to Utah , Cannon was asked to become the first assistant to George Q. Morris , the general superintendent of the church 's . Cannon served in this capacity until his death from pancreatic cancer
2ead4a6e-f972-4639-a63b-8ff5c3734789_Joseph_J._Canno:7
[{"answer": "Russia", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "25391", "title": "Russia"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nJoseph Jenne Cannon (May 22, 1877 – November 5, 1945) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Europe. He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in St. Petersburg and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903. Lyman and Cannon", "id": "13710370" }, { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nalso similarly dedicated Finland in 1903. In the 1908 election, Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. He served one term, from 1909 to 1911. Cannon was not formally associated with any political party. From 1931 to 1934, Cannon was the editor of the \"Deseret News\", a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church. His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church's British Mission. Cannon served in this", "id": "13710371" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nSylvester Quayle Cannon (June 10, 1877 – May 29, 1943) was an American businessman, engineer, and religious leader who served as the sixth presiding bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1925 to 1938 and a member of church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1939 until his death. He was the son of George Q. Cannon, an apostle and member of the church's First Presidency. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. He studied", "id": "2194372" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nJohn Quayle Cannon (April 19, 1857 – January 14, 1931) was an editor-in-chief of the \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, Utah, and a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He also served as a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army during the Spanish–American War. He was the son of LDS Church apostle George Q. Cannon and Elizabeth Hoagland. He was married to Elizabeth \"Annie\" Wells Cannon. Cannon", "id": "7202721" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nFrank Jenne Cannon (January 25, 1859July 25, 1933) was the first United States Senator from Utah, who served from 1896 to 1899. Born in Salt Lake City, he was the eldest child of Sarah Jenne Cannon and George Q. Cannon. His father was an Apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and later was a member of its First Presidency. After attending the school in Salt Lake City, he studied at University of Deseret, graduating at the age of 19", "id": "11000345" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nEdwin Quayle \"Ted\" Cannon, Jr. (May 6, 1918 – April 6, 2005) was a Utah politician and businessman and was a prominent leader and missionary in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was among the first missionaries in the LDS Church to preach to black people in Africa and was part of the first group missionaries sent to establish official congregations of the LDS Church in West Africa. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Edwin Q. Cannon,", "id": "9582822" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Ivins Cannon (March 9, 1920 – August 4, 2009) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1986 to 1991. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, Cannon was the son of George J. Cannon and Lucy Grant Cannon, a leader of the youth in the LDS Church. His maternal grandfather was Heber J. Grant, the seventh president of the LDS Church. His paternal grandfather was Abraham H. Cannon, who was a member of the church", "id": "8339578" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nLucy Grant Cannon (October 22, 1880 – May 7, 1966) was the fourth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1937 to 1948. She was a member of the general presidency of the Young Women from 1923 to 1948, serving as a counselor to two presidents. Lucy Grant was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Lucy Stringham and LDS Church apostle Heber J. Grant. She served as a church missionary in the Western", "id": "1681853" }, { "contents": "George Mousley Cannon\n\n\nTrust Company. He served as a delegate to the 1895 Utah State Constitutional Convention and chaired the committee which formulated the articles on taxation and public debt. In 1896, Cannon was elected to the Utah State Senate and served as its first president. When The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) modified stake boundaries in 1900, dividing the new Granite Stake off from the Salt Lake Stake, Cannon became the Sunday School Superintendent of the new stake. From 1901 until after 1930, Cannon served as", "id": "8629874" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nat the University of Utah and then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received a B.S. degree in mining engineering. In 1899, Cannon began an LDS Church mission in Belgium. Cannon then served from 1900 to 1902 as president of the church's Netherlands–Belgium Mission. Cannon also served as Francis M. Lyman's secretary on a three-month trip to many nations along the Mediterranean and in the Middle East. From 1916 to 1925, Cannon served as president of the Pioneer Stake in Salt Lake City. In", "id": "2194373" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\nAbraham Hoagland Cannon (also reported as Abram H. Cannon) (March 12, 1859 – July 19, 1896) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. His parents were George Q. Cannon, a Latter Day Saints apostle, and Elizabeth Hoagland, daughter of Abraham Hoagland. Cannon studied at Deseret University. Later, he studied architecture under Obed Taylor. Cannon married Sarah A.", "id": "9035314" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nSr. and Luella Wareing. He was born at his parents' home because of the 1918 influenza pandemic. Cannon's paternal grandfather was George Q. Cannon, a Mormon pioneer and prominent leader in the LDS Church. Cannon was raised in Salt Lake City. In 1937, Cannon went on a mission for the LDS Church to Nazi Germany. He was president of a branch of the church in Berlin in 1939 when the LDS Church evacuated its missionaries from Europe at the beginning of World War II. Cannon finished his mission in", "id": "9582823" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\n. Callville was submerged when Lake Mead was filled. In 1869 and 1870, Cannon served a second mission in the Eastern United States. In April 1876, Cannon became president of the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. He served in this position until April 1, 1904. After his time as stake president, Cannon served as a patriarch in the church. Cannon was the mayor of St. George, Utah Territory in 1861 and 1862. In 1896, after Utah had become a U.S. state, he stood for election", "id": "7202652" }, { "contents": "Donald Q. Cannon\n\n\nDonald Quayle Cannon (born 1936) is a retired professor at Brigham Young University who specializes in Mormon history, particularly early Mormon history and international Mormon history. As a young man, Cannon was a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Germany. Cannon earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Utah. Cannon holds a Ph.D. from Clark University. In the late 1960s, he taught at the University of Southern Maine. In the LDS Church he has", "id": "10057919" }, { "contents": "George Goddard (Mormon)\n\n\nwas the clerk to LDS Church presiding bishop Edward Hunter. From 1874 to 1884, Goddard was the clerk of the LDS Church's biannual general conferences. In 1872, Goddard became the inaugural first assistant to George Q. Cannon, the first superintendent of the Deseret Sunday School Union. Goddard served in this capacity for 26 years, until his death in 1899. Goddard was also a member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and a patriarch in the church. He died in Salt Lake City and was buried at Salt Lake City Cemetery.", "id": "7701639" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nuntil their arrival in Utah. In 1854, Cannon went on a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to the Eastern United States, where he assisted John Taylor in publishing a periodical entitled \"The Mormon\". He also preached and baptized in Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware. Cannon returned to Utah Territory due to the troubles connected with the Utah War. In 1864, Cannon helped establish Call's Landing on the Colorado River, later known as Callville, Nevada", "id": "7202651" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nJanath Russell Cannon (October 28, 1918 – July 5, 2007) was a counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was also a prominent missionary in the church and was among the first to preach to black people in Africa. Born in Ogden, Utah, Janath Russell was educated at Wellesley College. In 1941, she married Edwin Q. Cannon in the Salt Lake Temple. From 1971 to 1974,", "id": "9582964" }, { "contents": "Joseph A. Cannon\n\n\nserved as an assistant administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from 1983 to 1985. Joseph A. Cannon was born on July 31, 1949. Cannon served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Ireland, including on the Isle of Man, the ancestral homeland of the Cannons. Cannon received a degree in political science and, in 1977, a law degree from Brigham Young University. Cannon served as a law clerk in Salt Lake City for U.S. District", "id": "7202830" }, { "contents": "Elaine A. Cannon\n\n\nElaine Anderson Cannon (April 9, 1922 – May 19, 2003) was the eighth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 to 1984. Cannon has been a writer and an editor and is the author of over 50 books. Elaine Anderson was born to Aldon Joseph and Minnie Egan Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a teenager, she started writing a daily column aimed at teenagers for the \"Deseret News\". She", "id": "1682052" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nAdele Morris Cannon Howells (January 11, 1886 – April 14, 1951) was the fourth general president of the Primary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1943 until her death of rheumatic heart disease. She contributed to \"The Children's Friend\" magazine, as well as the fundraising for the Children's Primary Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. Adele Morris Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to George Mousley Cannon and Marian Adelaide Morris. She", "id": "1336419" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\nGeorgius Young Cannon (March 6, 1892 – March 29, 1987) was a 20th-century architect in the American West who operated principally out of Salt Lake City, Utah. Cannon trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), graduating in 1918. He then joined the army and later returned to Utah to intern with the architectural firm Ware & Treganza and Cannon & Fetzer. He served two missions to Germany for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). For a time", "id": "12786285" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Quayle Cannon (January 11, 1827 – April 12, 1901) was an early member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), and served in the First Presidency under four successive presidents of the church: Brigham Young, John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. He was the church's chief political strategist, and was dubbed \"the Mormon premier\" and \"the Mormon Richelieu\" by the press. He was also a five", "id": "19825263" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nwas the oldest of nine children, and her father George Cannon was the first president of the Utah State Senate. As a child, Cannon suffered from rheumatic fever. She enjoyed reading in her spare time and horseback riding. She was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Cannon attended schools in Salt Lake City and graduated from the LDS High School and Business College in 1903. She attended the University of Utah and studied physical education and graduated with her bachelor's degree in 1909. Cannon", "id": "1336420" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nis one of the few general authorities of the LDS Church to have been excommunicated. From 1889 until 1892, Cannon was the editor of the \"Ogden Standard\". From October 1892 until April 1898, he was the editor in chief of the \"Deseret News\". After the Spanish–American War he returned to work at the \"Deseret News\" and served as an executive editor of the newspaper off-and-on until his death. He was much beloved by his co-workers. Cannon was a member", "id": "7202722" }, { "contents": "Tracy Y. Cannon\n\n\nLatter-day Saints. In 1939, he was made second assistant to Melvin J. Ballard, supervisor of the committee. From 1915 to 1927, Cannon was a member of the high council of the Pioneer Stake of the LDS Church. In 1917, he became a member of the Deseret Sunday School Union General Board. From 1930 through 1936, Cannon was bishop of the Cannon Ward in Salt Lake City. Cannon was an editor of the 1927 LDS Church hymnal. In 1925, Cannon was appointed director of the McCune School", "id": "12019030" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe church's Welsh-language periodical, \"Udgorn Seion\". From 1867 to 1874, Cannon was the managing editor of the \"Deseret News\". It was under his direction that the newspaper was first published on a daily basis. In 1866, Cannon began publication of a magazine for youth and young adult Latter-day Saints called \"The Juvenile Instructor\". He owned and published this magazine until his death; in 1901 his family sold the magazine to the LDS Church's Sunday School organization. The periodical was", "id": "19825272" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nCannon and her husband were heads of the Switzerland Mission of the LDS Church. Upon their return to Utah in 1974, Cannon became the first counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the church's Relief Society. Cannon served in this capacity until 1978, when she was released so that she and her husband could become the first missionaries of the church to preach in \"black Africa\". They — along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey — preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 27", "id": "9582965" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\nan LDS Church organization responsible for educating young members of the LDS church, and the magazine was the first church periodical oriented toward youth. Cannon opened the George Q. Cannon & Sons bookstore in 1867 to sell the magazine and other publications of an uplifting nature. Cannon believed that secular novels did not reflect Latter-day Saint values. In the 1880s, Cannon expanded with a branch in Ogden, Utah. It is not known how many books Cannon & Sons actually published itself. In this era, authors commonly self-published", "id": "18344085" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n. Cannon was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. Cannon fathered 32 children, some of whom are Abraham H. Cannon, John Q. Cannon, and Sylvester Q. Cannon, who all became general authorities of the LDS Church; Frank J. Cannon, Utah's first U.S. Senator; and Lewis T. Cannon and Georgius Y. Cannon, prominent architects in Utah. Some of Cannon's prominent descendants include Howard Cannon, U.S. Senator from Nevada from 1959 to 1983 and Chris Cannon, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1997 to", "id": "19825281" }, { "contents": "Salt Lake City Council Hall\n\n\nwho was then the official architect for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Built at First South and 120 East (more on Salt Lake City's coordinate system), sandstone for the structure was delivered from Red Butte Canyon on Utah's first chartered railroad. The well-furnished Greek revival building was completed at a cost of $70,000. In January 1866, City Hall was dedicated by George Q. Cannon, a prominent LDS leader. Many other LDS leaders attended the dedication including Brigham", "id": "19382830" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\n, Cannon moved to Los Angeles and worked as the office manager of his MIT schoolmate Wallace Neff. He later returned to Utah and designed numerous buildings, mostly residences, and some of which remain on the National Register of Historic Places. Among his works were meetinghouses of the LDS Church and other civic buildings. Cannon served on a church-appointed board of six architects that oversaw the construction of the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple. Cannon was the youngest of 32 children born to LDS Church leader George Q. Cannon. His mother,", "id": "12786286" }, { "contents": "Karl G. Maeser\n\n\nin the General Superintendency of the Deseret Sunday School Union. He was the Second Assistant to General Superintendent George Q. Cannon from July 1894 to January 1899. He then served as the First Assistant to Cannon from January 1899 until February 1901. Maeser also participated in the Utah constitutional convention after Abraham Smoot's death in 1895. He proposed an article to support prohibition, but later backed down. Missionaries from the LDS Church were removed from California in 1858 due to the Utah War. Missionary work resumed in 1892. Maeser presided over", "id": "11030473" }, { "contents": "Frank B. Woodbury\n\n\nFrank Bartlett Woodbury (December 27, 1867 – December 21, 1962) was a leader of and an Acting Presiding Patriarch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), one of only three church members to hold this position in church history. Born in St. George, Utah Territory, to Orin Nelson Woodbury and Ann Cannon, Woodbury served in many capacities in the church on a local level. Some, but not all, LDS Church sources list Woodbury as \"Acting Presiding Patriarch\" of", "id": "8238754" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand 1958 and served three full terms. From 1964 to 1971, Cannon was a bishop of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. From 1971 to 1974, he was the president of the Switzerland Mission of the church. In 1978, three weeks after the LDS Church announced that it would no longer impose restrictions of black people receiving the priesthood or participating in temple ordinances, Cannon traveled to Africa on behalf of the church with Merrill J. Bateman to assess the prospects for church missionary work and growth in \"black Africa\"", "id": "9582825" }, { "contents": "Amasa Lyman\n\n\n). Lyman served as the first mayor of San Bernardino. In 1860, Young appointed three of the twelve apostles—Lyman, Charles C. Rich, and George Q. Cannon—to the presidency of the church's European Mission. On March 16, 1862, Lyman preached a sermon in Dundee, Scotland, which all but denied the reality of and the necessity for the atonement of Jesus Christ, which is a central tenet of the LDS Church. His speech appeared to have been overlooked for years, but on January 21", "id": "12068047" }, { "contents": "Mark E. Petersen\n\n\nMark Edward Petersen (November 7, 1900 – January 11, 1984) was an American news editor and religious leader who served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1944 until his death. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, he filled the vacancy in the Quorum caused by the excommunication of Richard R. Lyman. Petersen had become managing editor of the church-owned \"Deseret News\" in 1935 and editor in 1941.", "id": "2692480" }, { "contents": "Thomas C. Griggs\n\n\nthe LDS Church's Aaronic priesthood; his call to this office was given by Apostle George Q. Cannon. With the outbreak of the American Civil War, the Griggs heeded the counsel of LDS Church leaders to move to Utah Territory. The Griggs crossed the plains in Joseph Horne's Mormon pioneer company in 1861. Griggs first joined the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in 1866 when Charles John Thomas was the director. Griggs would continue as a member of the choir until his death in 1903. While Robert Sands was the conductor of the choir", "id": "9481149" }, { "contents": "Charles Clarence Neslen\n\n\nfrom Germany and he was imprisoned in Danzig. He served as president of the Königsberg District of the LDS Church for a part of his mission. Neslen was a member of the Democratic Party and a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1912. Neslen worked a total of 15 years for the \"Deseret News\". He was also a realtor and for a time served as secretary of the Salt Lake Real Estate Association. On October 26, 1905, Neslen married Grace T. Cannon, a daughter of George Q. Cannon.", "id": "21092533" }, { "contents": "Stephen L. Chipman\n\n\nStephen L. Chipman (1864–1945) was a member of the Utah State Legislature in 1903 and a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Utah County. He was also the first president of the Salt Lake Temple who was not also an apostle in the LDS Church. Chipman studied at Brigham Young Academy (the predecessor of Brigham Young University (BYU)) as a youth. From 1885 to 1887 he served as a Mormon missionary in the Southern States Mission of the LDS Church", "id": "15228384" }, { "contents": "Mountain Meadows massacre and Mormon public relations\n\n\nCannon, then president of the LDS California Mission. In the October 13, 1857 edition of Cannon's San Francisco newspaper \"The Western Standard\", Cannon responded to initial news reports of involvement by Mormons by charging the responsible journalists with writing \"reckless and malignant slanders\", despite knowing that the southern Utah Mormons were \"as innocent of [the massacre] as the child unborn\". The church's official newspaper in Salt Lake City, \"The Deseret News\", was initially slow to comment on the massacre,", "id": "22212632" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas the second-most senior apostle of the church after the death of Woodruff, Cannon did not become President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, as would be the practice in the LDS Church today. Rather, because Cannon was a member of the First Presidency, the church simply appointed the next senior apostle of the church—Brigham Young, Jr.—to be the quorum president. (Under today's practices, Cannon would have been appointed the president of the quorum and Young would have been appointed acting president.) Cannon", "id": "19825274" }, { "contents": "Clifford E. Young\n\n\nClifford Earle Young (December 7, 1883 – August 21, 1958) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1941 until his death. Young was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, the son of LDS Church leader Seymour B. Young. From 1905 to 1908, he served as a Mormon missionary in England and Germany. In 1928, Young became the president of the Alpine Stake of the LDS Church in Utah. In 1934, he joined the", "id": "8315768" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n33. Upon his joining the Quorum of the Twelve, Cannon was called to preside over the church's European Mission. Cannon's mission in Europe ended when he was recalled by Young in 1862 to work in Washington, D.C., to assist in the church's promotion of Utah Territory's bid for statehood. At the adjournment of the 1862 congressional session, Cannon again left for Europe to preside over the mission. In this capacity, Cannon was the editor of the \"Millennial Star\" and, for a short time,", "id": "19825271" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nfrom the federal authorities. In September 1888, Cannon surrendered himself and pleaded guilty at trial to charges of unlawful cohabitation under the Edmunds Act. As a result, Cannon served nearly six months in Utah's federal penitentiary. Cannon was pardoned in 1894 by U.S. President Grover Cleveland. Cannon died on April 12, 1901, in Monterey, California, at 74 years of age. Had he lived a few months longer, he would have become the President of the LDS Church: Lorenzo Snow died on October 10 of that year", "id": "19825280" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Isle of Man\n\n\nand Idaho which descends from the 19th century marriage of George Cannon and Ann Quayle before their emigration from Peel, Isle of Man. The family's most notable member was their oldest son George Quayle Cannon. The family is connected by marriage to the Bennion, Taylor, Wells and Young political families. LDS Membership statistics as of January 1, 2011 for the Isle of Man. The nation of the Isle of Man does not have its own mission. Instead it is served by an English mission. Five out of the six", "id": "7797107" }, { "contents": "The Contributor (LDS magazine)\n\n\nThe Contributor was an independent publication associated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) between 1879 and 1896. It was a monthly periodical and sought to represent the Young Men's and Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Associations (YMMIA and YLMIA respectively), the youth organizations of the LDS Church at the time. It was founded by Junius F. Wells, the inaugural head of the YMMIA. Abraham H. Cannon became editor when the magazine was purchased by the Cannon Publishing Company in 1892. With the", "id": "505110" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe official organ of the Sunday School until 1930, when it was replaced with \"The Instructor\". Cannon also served as the first general superintendent of the church's Sunday School from 1867 until his death. On April 8, 1873, Cannon became a member of the church's First Presidency when he was called as the first counselor by Brigham Young. Cannon went on to serve as counselor to three more presidents of the church: he was First Counselor to John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. Although Cannon", "id": "19825273" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\ntogether. Prior to her service in the general Primary presidency, Clara Cannon was a counselor in the presidencies of the Primary and Relief Society in the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. When Louie B. Felt became the first general presidency of the Primary, Matilda M. Barratt and Cannon were selected as Felt's counselors. Cannon was a counselor until 1895; the next year she was succeeded in the position by Josephine R. West. Clara Moses Cannon died of throat cancer in Centerville, Utah, aged 87 and was interred in", "id": "10663424" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nScouts of America and served in the organization's Great Salt Lake Council. Prior to his call as a general authority, Cannon served in the church as a bishop, stake president, patriarch, temple sealer, and regional representative. He was also the president of the church's Central British Mission from 1966 to 1969. From 1969 to 1972, Cannon was an assistant and counselor to W. Jay Eldredge, the general superintendent of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association. Cannon became a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy", "id": "8339580" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe Nauvoo Legion. During this time, Cannon served as printer of the \"Deseret News\" while it was publishing in exile in Fillmore, Utah. After the Utah War, he was called as president of the church's Eastern States Mission. The murder of Parley P. Pratt in 1857 created a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. That vacancy was not filled until Brigham Young called Cannon to the apostleship three years later. Cannon was ordained to the priesthood office of apostle on August 26, 1860, at age", "id": "19825270" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nin the Sandwich Islands (later known as the Kingdom of Hawaii), where he served for four years. While in the islands, Cannon converted many Native Hawaiians. One of the most notable was Jonatana Napela, who assisted Cannon in translating the Book of Mormon into Hawaiian. Joseph F. Smith, a future church president, would follow Cannon and serve in Hawaii one year later. Returning to Utah Territory, Cannon married Elizabeth Hoagland (daughter of Abraham Hoagland and his wife.) He was almost immediately called to assist apostle", "id": "19825268" }, { "contents": "Ronald E. Poelman\n\n\nRonald Eugene Poelman (May 10, 1928 – November 19, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 until his death. In 1984, he delivered a controversial sermon in the LDS Church's general conference which the church redacted before publishing. Poelman was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to a Latter-day Saint family. As a young man, he served as a Mormon missionary in the LDS Church's Netherlands Mission. He began his", "id": "4765396" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\n. He would marry Martha Brown of Ogden in 1878. In 1891 he helped to organize the Utah Republican Party. After a failed bid to become delegate from the Utah Territory, he succeeded and served from March 4, 1895, to January 4, 1896. Cannon was chosen in 1896 to serve as senator by the Utah Legislature in spite of LDS church leadership favoring his father for the job. He served in the United States Senate, initially, as a member of the Republican Party; however, he later became a", "id": "11000346" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nmember of the Silver Republican Party, founded by his successor (and future employer at \"The Salt Lake Tribune\") Thomas Kearns. Cannon lost re-election in 1899. Utah's state legislators indicated they would not support Cannon for re-election shortly after the November 1898 elections. Cannon had voted against the Dingley Act, which would have raised tariffs on sugar and helped the Utah sugar industry. It was strongly supported by the LDS Church hierarchy, who now opposed his re-election. Other factors were his support", "id": "11000347" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand Ghana. The first convert baptized in Africa was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and his wife were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' centre in Nauvoo, Illinois. For three months in 1989, Cannon was the interim president of the LDS Church's Germany Hamburg Mission; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. After his interim service as mission president, Cannon was the second president of the Frankfurt Germany Temple from 1989 to", "id": "9582827" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nCounselor to William B. Preston, the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church; he served in this position between 1884 and 1886. In 1884, shortly after Cannon had become a general authority, a sensationalized news story by Joseph Lippman in the \"Salt Lake Tribune\" alleged that Cannon had taken his wife's sister Louie Wells as a plural wife. Lippman suggested that Cannon and Wells had been married in the Logan Temple. In fact, there had been no such marriage, though it was later revealed that Cannon and Wells had", "id": "7202724" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nbranches of the LDS Church in Nigeria and Ghana. The first convert baptized in Nigeria was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and her husband were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' center in Nauvoo, Illinois. In 1989, they served as interim leaders of the Germany Hamburg Mission of the church; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. From 1989 to 1992, Cannon was the matron of the Frankfurt Germany Temple while her husband", "id": "9582966" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\n's Quorum of the Twelve. Abraham was a son of George Q. Cannon, an early member of the church's First Presidency. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary in the church's Central States Mission. After his mission, he served in the United States Air Force during the Second World War. In 1946, he began attending Brigham Young University (BYU). After graduating from BYU, Cannon became a vice president of Beneficial Life Insurance Company in Salt Lake City. He was active in the Boy", "id": "8339579" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\n1925, Cannon became the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church, succeeding Charles W. Nibley. Cannon's counselors were David A. Smith and John Wells. In 1938, Cannon was released as Presiding Bishop and was succeeded by LeGrand Richards. At the same time, Cannon was ordained an apostle and made an \"associate\" of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, a unique position that had never been filled before. When Quorum member Melvin J. Ballard died the next year, Cannon became a full member of the Quorum; he served", "id": "2194374" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\nClarissa Cordelia (\"Clara\") Moses Cannon (April 21, 1839 – August 21, 1926) was a Mormon pioneer and a member of the first-ever general presidency of the Primary organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). She was the second counselor to general president Louie B. Felt from 1880 to 1895. Clara Moses was born in Westfield, Massachusetts. In 1846 she took the six-month journey on the ship \"Brooklyn\" from New York City to San", "id": "10663422" }, { "contents": "Leonora Cannon Taylor\n\n\nLeonora Cannon Taylor (October 6, 1796–December 9, 1868) was a member of the Relief Society organization at the time of its origin and the first wife of John Taylor, the third president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). On October 6, 1796 in Peel, Isle of Man, Leonora Cannon was born to George Cannon and Leonora Callister. As the oldest daughter in the family, when Leonora's father died when she was thirteen she went away to London to work", "id": "16190675" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\ntheir books, which were then distributed by others. However, Cannon & Sons distributed several important books through their stores and mail order (see table). The company had extensive ties to the LDS Church-owned newspaper, the \"Deseret News.\" Five of Cannon's sons held important positions in the paper, and Cannon himself was editor between 1867 and 1872, and again while temporarily owning the paper from 1892 to 1898. Nearly every George Q. Cannon & Sons book was printed on the \"Deseret News\" press", "id": "18344086" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nof the Utah Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Cannon was the oldest son of George Q. Cannon and the one most expected to follow in his prominent father's footsteps in politics, church office, and journalism. Heber J. Grant once said of Cannon: \"There probably is not a young man in the church who had had more opportunities and advantages extended to him educationally, spiritually, and every other way than John Q. Cannon.\" At the age of 27, Cannon was called to serve as the Second", "id": "7202723" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nMartha Maria \"Mattie\" Hughes Cannon (July 1, 1857 – July 10, 1932) was a Welsh-born immigrant to the United States, a polygamous wife, physician, Utah women's rights advocate and suffragist, and Utah State Senator. Her family immigrated to the United States as converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and traveled West to settle in Utah territory with other Mormons. She started working at the age of fourteen. At sixteen she enrolled in the University", "id": "15993465" }, { "contents": "Church Office Building\n\n\nThe Church Office Building is a 28-story building in Salt Lake City, Utah, which houses the administrative support staff for the lay ministry of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) throughout the world. The building is 420 ft (128 m) tall at roof level and is located within the Temple Square complex on the corner of North Temple and State Street. The building was designed by George Cannon Young at a cost of US$31 million to build. Construction took place from 1962 to 1972", "id": "13754819" }, { "contents": "John Lyman Smith\n\n\nJohn Lyman Smith (November 17, 1828 – February 21, 1898) was an American politician and Mormon missionary. He served as a member of the Utah Territory's Legislative Assembly's House of Representatives for Iron County, Utah, from 1852 to 1853, and the Great Salt Lake County, Utah, from 1853 to 1855. Cousin of the founder of the Latter Day Saint Movement, Joseph Smith, Smith was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) who traveled to the", "id": "18219861" }, { "contents": "Francis M. Lyman\n\n\nFrancis Marion Lyman (January 12, 1840 – November 18, 1916) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was the President of the Quorum from 1903 until his death. Lyman's father and son were also apostles in the church: his father was Amasa M. Lyman and his son was Richard R. Lyman. Both his father and son were excommunicated from the church while serving as apostles. Francis M. Lyman was born as", "id": "20761093" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nAngus Munn Cannon (May 17, 1834 – June 7, 1915) was an early Latter Day Saint leader and Mormon pioneer. Cannon was born in Liverpool, Lancashire, England. His Manx parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 1840, being baptized by his uncle John Taylor. In 1842, the Cannon family went to Nauvoo, Illinois, United States. By 1849, they were in Utah Territory. Cannon was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon and their lives followed very similar paths up", "id": "7202650" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\naffairs while Taylor recovered. This training would serve him well in later life. Cannon's father died in 1845. In 1846, Taylor traveled to England to organize the affairs of the church after Smith's death. Meanwhile, Cannon accompanied Taylor's wife and family as they moved to Winter Quarters, Nebraska. When Taylor returned, Cannon traveled with the entire Taylor family to the Salt Lake Valley, arriving in October 1847. In 1849, Cannon was asked by church president Brigham Young to serve as a missionary for the church", "id": "19825267" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nstaying in the position until December 31, 1903. Cannon attempted to prohibit children not vaccinated from attending school in case of a disease outbreak. The Board of Health sent out vaccines; however, the \"Deseret News\" spread information that vaccines weren't safe. LDS Church leaders were divided on the subject. One apostle, Brigham Young Jr. was very vocal in his opinions, writing in the \"Deseret News\" about the evils of vaccinations. The influence of the \"Deseret News\" and Mormon religious leaders limited how many", "id": "15993490" }, { "contents": "Billy Johnson (Mormon)\n\n\nLDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball announced Official Declaration 2 which extended the priesthood to all worthy male members of the church regardless of race or color. In gratitude, Johnson sent a letter to Kimball, explaining that God had prepared the people in Ghana, asking him to send missionaries to the members. Kimball responded to his pleas and sent the first called missionaries Rendell N. Mabey and Rachel Mabey. They joined Edwin Q. Cannon and Janath R. Cannon. Johnson was finally baptized into the LDS Church on December 9, 1978. He", "id": "4108521" }, { "contents": "Juvenile Instructor\n\n\ncatechisms on the Bible, Book of Mormon, and Doctrine and Covenants; musical compositions; illustrations; stories; editorial teachings; and other aids to gospel instruction. It was the first magazine for children published in the United States west of the Mississippi River. For much of its history, \"The Juvenile Instructor\" was owned by the Cannon family. Its first editor was George Q. Cannon, an apostle in the LDS Church. Cannon and his family continued to publish the magazine privately until January 1, 1901, when the", "id": "9210614" }, { "contents": "Joseph F. Smith\n\n\nand as second counselor to Lorenzo Snow (1898–1901). Smith was appointed first counselor to Snow on the death of first counselor George Q. Cannon, but, as Snow himself died only four days later, Smith never served in that position. He succeeded Snow as president of the LDS Church and president of the Salt Lake Temple. He served as president of the temple until 1911, when he transferred the responsibility to Anthon H. Lund. Smith also served as editor of the \"Improvement Era\" and \"Juvenile Instructor\",", "id": "4117444" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in California\n\n\nQ. Cannon began publication in San Francisco of the \"Western Standard\", a weekly periodical supportive of the Church. The first colonization from Utah to California came in 1851 when a company of about 450 saints and slaves under direction of Elders Amasa M. Lyman and Charles C. Rich of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles settled at what is now San Bernardino. The colony was the final settlement in a string of Mormon communities extending from Salt Lake City in an area known as Deseret. The community thrived, and on July 6,", "id": "22187256" }, { "contents": "Sunday School (LDS Church)\n\n\nout. On November 11, 1867, Young and church leaders Daniel H. Wells, George A. Smith, Wilford Woodruff, George Q. Cannon, and Brigham Young, Jr. met and organized the Parent Sunday School Union. Young appointed Cannon as the first general superintendent of the Sunday School, a position he would hold until his death in 1901. In 1872, the Sunday School organization was renamed the Deseret Sunday School Union. The organized Sunday School addressed lesson topics and source materials, grading, prizes and rewards, use of hymns", "id": "8671425" }, { "contents": "Hugh W. Pinnock\n\n\nHugh Wallace Pinnock (January 15, 1934 – December 16, 2000) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Pinnock was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Western States Mission. Pinnock graduated from University of Utah in 1958, where he became a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity and Owl and Key. Prior to his call to the First", "id": "8519001" }, { "contents": "Charles W. Penrose\n\n\nwas organized Penrose was called as a member of the high council. In 1877, Penrose became the assistant editor of the LDS Church-owned \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, working under George Q. Cannon. Penrose was known for his writing, including missionary tracts and lyrics of Latter-day Saint hymns, including \"God of Our Fathers\", \"O Ye Mountains High\", and \"Up, Awake, Ye Defenders of Zion\". In 1880, Penrose became the editor-in-chief of", "id": "2194239" }, { "contents": "Rulon S. Wells\n\n\nRulon Seymour Wells (July 7, 1854 – May 7, 1941) was a Utah politician and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1893 until his death. Wells was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to LDS Church leader Daniel H. Wells (1814–1891) and Louisa Free (1824–1886). In 1875, Wells travelled to Europe as a Mormon missionary and worked primarily in Germany and Switzerland. He returned to the United States in 1877. On", "id": "8315459" }, { "contents": "G. Homer Durham\n\n\nGeorge Homer Durham (February 4, 1911 – January 10, 1985) was an American academic administrator and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Durham was born in Parowan, Utah, and was raised in Salt Lake City. As a boy in grade school, he met and became lifelong friends with future LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley. As a young man, Durham served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the British", "id": "21588256" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nJonatana Napela or Jonathan Hawaii Napela (first name also spelled Iohatana, full name Napelakapuonamahanaonaleleonalani) (September 11, 1813 – August 6, 1879) was one of the earliest Hawaiian converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Hawaii, joining in the 1830s. He helped translate the Book of Mormon into the Hawaiian language, as \"Ka Buke a Moramona,\" working with missionary George Q. Cannon. Napela was appointed to serve as a superintendent of the colony at Kalaupapa, Molokai", "id": "16647246" }, { "contents": "Richfield, Utah\n\n\nserves about 600 students per year. As in most settled areas of rural Utah, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) plays a prominent role. The Mormons were highly industrious colonizers. From 1847, when they founded Salt Lake City, until 1877, they founded 360 towns. Following direction from Brigham Young, Latter-day Saints founded the town and outlying hamlets about 150 years ago. Members of the LDS Church are predominant among the residents. Even in this heart of Mormon country,", "id": "11082836" }, { "contents": "Marvin O. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Owen Ashton (April 8, 1883 – October 7, 1946) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1938 until his death. Prior to becoming a general authority, Ashton was a prominent local leader of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City, Utah. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Mormon parents. He married Rachel Grace Jeremy in 1906 and in 1907 went to England as a missionary for the LDS Church. He returned", "id": "14505232" }, { "contents": "LeGrand Richards\n\n\nLeGrand Richards (February 6, 1886 – January 11, 1983) was a prominent missionary and leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He served as the seventh presiding bishop of the LDS Church from 1938 to 1952, and was then called as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles by church president David O. McKay. Richards served in the Quorum of the Twelve until his death in Salt Lake City, Utah, at the age of 96. Richards was born in", "id": "2294374" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nwas educated at Lahainaluna School. Napela was trained as a lawyer. He was serving as a judge in Wailuku, Hawaii, when he met American George Q. Cannon, a member of the LDS Church on a missionary trip to Hawaii. After Napela's conversion in the 1830s to the LDS Church, the government forced the judge to resign from his position. The LDS Church was regarded with suspicion. LDS Church historian Andrew Jensen said that Napela \"did splendid missionary work for the Church.\" Napela was sent on a specific", "id": "16647248" }, { "contents": "Gardo House\n\n\ncounselor George Q. Cannon and other church leaders suggested that Taylor occupy the Gardo House after its completion, but he repeatedly refused. However, when church members unanimously voted on April 9, 1879, to make the Gardo House the official parsonage for LDS Church presidents, Taylor reluctantly accepted their decision. Moses Thatcher, William Jennings, and Angus M. Cannon were appointed as a committee to oversee completion of the mansion. On December 27, 1881, the Deseret News published a letter from John Taylor announcing a public reception and tour of", "id": "1496184" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nStates Mission of the church in 1901. In 1902, Grant married George J. Cannon. In 1923, Cannon was asked to succeed Mae Taylor Nystrom as the second counselor to Martha Horne Tingey, the general president of what was then called the Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Association. In 1929, when Ruth May Fox succeeded Tingey, Cannon was asked to be her first counselor. Cannon served in this capacity until 1929, when Fox was released and Cannon was selected by her father, who was President of the Church, to", "id": "1681854" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\n. (At the time, Cannon was a counselor to James E. Faust in the church's International Mission, which had jurisdiction over all areas of the world not otherwise part of a mission.) After Bateman and Cannon reported the results of their trip, Cannon and his wife were called and set apart as the first Mormon missionaries to black Africa. They—along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey—preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 35 branches and 5 districts of the LDS Church in Nigeria", "id": "9582826" }, { "contents": "Marion D. Hanks\n\n\nMarion Duff Hanks (October 13, 1921 – August 5, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1953 until his death. Hanks was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man he served in the Northern States Mission of the LDS Church, which was headquartered in Chicago. He was in the United States Navy during World War II and received a J.D. from the University of Utah. Prior to his call as a general authority", "id": "6558935" }, { "contents": "Lillie T. Freeze\n\n\nthe Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association (YLMIA). In this capacity, she was invited to speak at the Salt Lake Tabernacle on April 6, 1880, at a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the LDS Church's founding. In 1880, Lillie Freeze was one of the founding members of the LDS Church's Primary Association. Freeze was appointed as the first secretary of the general presidency, which was composed of Louie B. Felt, Matilda M. Barratt, and Clara C. M. Cannon. Freeze was secretary until 1888, when", "id": "10906695" }, { "contents": "Henry D. Taylor\n\n\nHenry Dixon Taylor (November 22, 1903 – February 24, 1987) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1958 until his death. Taylor was born in Provo, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Eastern States Mission. During his mission, Taylor was the president of the church's Connecticut District. Taylor received a bachelor's degree from Brigham Young University (BYU) and a master's degree", "id": "2477100" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas elected to be the non-voting delegate for Utah Territory in the United States Congress in 1872. He remained a congressional delegate until 1882, when his seat was declared vacant by the enactment of the Edmunds Act, which terminated many political and civil rights for Utah's Mormon polygamists. By 1880, Cannon had served four terms in Congress as Territorial Delegate. The newly appointed anti-Mormon territorial governor, Eli Houston Murray, openly supported the Liberal Party, which generally opposed church candidates. The 1880 territory-wide election", "id": "19825275" }, { "contents": "George F. Richards\n\n\nGeorge Franklin Richards (February 23, 1861 – August 8, 1950) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from April 9, 1906 until his death. He also served as Acting Presiding Patriarch of the LDS Church from 1937 to 1942 and President of the Quorum of the Twelve from May 25, 1945 until his death. Richards was born in Farmington, Utah Territory, the son of Franklin D. Richards and Nanny Longstroth. Richards", "id": "2194252" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\n1882, at the age of 23, Cannon assumed business control of the \"Juvenile Instructor\" and associated publications. He continued his management until his death. In October 1892, Cannon and his brother John Q. Cannon took control of the \"Deseret News\" publishing. He also became the editor and publisher of \"The Contributor\". On October 9, 1882, Cannon became a member of the First Seven Presidents of the Seventy of the church. On October 7, 1889, church president Wilford Woodruff named Cannon a member", "id": "9035316" }, { "contents": "Howard Cannon\n\n\nHis grandfather David Cannon, was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon, and a leading figure in the building of the St. George Temple, who was later the third president of that temple. His father Walter Cannon was one of David Cannon's 31 children. Howard's parents had married in 1909, his mother was Leah Sullivan. When Cannon was two years old his father left for England to served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for two years. Cannon went to Woodward School in", "id": "18060013" }, { "contents": "Mormon fiction\n\n\nMormons were generally non-fiction, including scripture, missionary tracts, and doctrinal literature. In 1844, Parley P. Pratt published what is commonly cited as the first work of LDS fiction, the didactic \"Dialogue between Joseph Smith and the Devil\". It was first published in the New York Herald. Early Mormon leaders like Brigham Young and George Q. Cannon condemned novels for wasting time, a rhetoric that persisted until the 1880s. Fiction among LDS Church members developed once the Mormons had settled in Utah and developed a degree of", "id": "453087" }, { "contents": "Marvin J. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Jeremy Ashton (May 6, 1915 – February 25, 1994) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1971 until his death. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was the son of Marvin O. Ashton, a local LDS leader, who later became a church general authority. The younger Ashton worked in the lumber business as a youth. He graduated from the University of Utah. He served a", "id": "19825413" }, { "contents": "Rudger Clawson\n\n\nRudger Judd Clawson (March 12, 1857 – June 21, 1943) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1898 until his death in 1943. He also served as President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1921 until his death and as a member of the First Presidency of the LDS Church for five days in 1901. Clawson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to Hiram Bradley Clawson and Margaret Judd", "id": "9035430" }, { "contents": "Utah-Idaho Sugar Company\n\n\npayment and a $130,000 loan. Cutler also went to Chicago and New York City to secure loans from banks; he came back, via train, with a bag full of money, as he did not think any banks in Utah could have cashed the large bank draft. The LDS church made more payments and secured more loans. In addition, George Q. Cannon and Heber J. Grant personally funded the enterprise. Joseph F. Smith, president of the LDS Church, gave a sermon in 1893 explaining that this was done to", "id": "1319991" }, { "contents": "President of the Church (LDS Church)\n\n\nthe President of the Quorum. When Woodruff died, his counselors returned to the Quorum based on the date they were ordained an apostle, placing George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith below Brigham Young Jr. and John Willard Young. Heber J. Grant objected to that arguing that seniority should be based on ordination to the Quorum rather than ordination as an apostle. Young argued that an apostle should not be demoted as long as he is worthy of the position. On March 31, 1900, Snow met with his counselors, Cannon and", "id": "16343191" }, { "contents": "Alfred W. McCune\n\n\n. Judge Orlando Powers, Associate Justice of the Utah Supreme Court, said in 1906 that he understood that McCune was not a Mormon. Frank J. Cannon, too, claimed McCune was not a Mormon, and B. H. Roberts, LDS Church historian and member of the First Council of the Seventy, said in 1930 that McCune was not a church member. Historian Orvin Malmquist, however, says that church records show he was baptized into the LDS Church at the age of eight in 1857, and that his marriage to Elizabeth", "id": "15062757" } ]
Joseph Jenne Cannon ( May 22 , 1877 -- November 5 , 1945 ) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ( LDS Church ) . He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family . As a young man , Cannon served as a for the LDS Church in Europe . He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of [START_ENT] Mormonism [END_ENT] in August 1903 . Lyman and Cannon also similarly dedicated Finland in 1903 . In the 1908 election , Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from . He served one term , from 1909 to 1911 . Cannon was not formally associated with any political party . From 1931 to 1934 , Cannon was the editor of the Deseret News , a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church . His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church 's British Mission . Cannon served in this capacity for three years , until 1937 . Immediately following his return to Utah , Cannon was asked to become the first assistant to George Q. Morris , the general superintendent of the church 's . Cannon served in this capacity until his death from pancreatic cancer
da701958-cfaf-40be-9d2e-dfb4506ed482_Joseph_J._Canno:8
[{"answer": "Mormonism", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "21023", "title": "Mormonism"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nJoseph Jenne Cannon (May 22, 1877 – November 5, 1945) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Europe. He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in St. Petersburg and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903. Lyman and Cannon", "id": "13710370" }, { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nalso similarly dedicated Finland in 1903. In the 1908 election, Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. He served one term, from 1909 to 1911. Cannon was not formally associated with any political party. From 1931 to 1934, Cannon was the editor of the \"Deseret News\", a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church. His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church's British Mission. Cannon served in this", "id": "13710371" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nSylvester Quayle Cannon (June 10, 1877 – May 29, 1943) was an American businessman, engineer, and religious leader who served as the sixth presiding bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1925 to 1938 and a member of church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1939 until his death. He was the son of George Q. Cannon, an apostle and member of the church's First Presidency. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. He studied", "id": "2194372" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nJohn Quayle Cannon (April 19, 1857 – January 14, 1931) was an editor-in-chief of the \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, Utah, and a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He also served as a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army during the Spanish–American War. He was the son of LDS Church apostle George Q. Cannon and Elizabeth Hoagland. He was married to Elizabeth \"Annie\" Wells Cannon. Cannon", "id": "7202721" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nFrank Jenne Cannon (January 25, 1859July 25, 1933) was the first United States Senator from Utah, who served from 1896 to 1899. Born in Salt Lake City, he was the eldest child of Sarah Jenne Cannon and George Q. Cannon. His father was an Apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and later was a member of its First Presidency. After attending the school in Salt Lake City, he studied at University of Deseret, graduating at the age of 19", "id": "11000345" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nEdwin Quayle \"Ted\" Cannon, Jr. (May 6, 1918 – April 6, 2005) was a Utah politician and businessman and was a prominent leader and missionary in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was among the first missionaries in the LDS Church to preach to black people in Africa and was part of the first group missionaries sent to establish official congregations of the LDS Church in West Africa. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Edwin Q. Cannon,", "id": "9582822" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Ivins Cannon (March 9, 1920 – August 4, 2009) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1986 to 1991. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, Cannon was the son of George J. Cannon and Lucy Grant Cannon, a leader of the youth in the LDS Church. His maternal grandfather was Heber J. Grant, the seventh president of the LDS Church. His paternal grandfather was Abraham H. Cannon, who was a member of the church", "id": "8339578" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nLucy Grant Cannon (October 22, 1880 – May 7, 1966) was the fourth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1937 to 1948. She was a member of the general presidency of the Young Women from 1923 to 1948, serving as a counselor to two presidents. Lucy Grant was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Lucy Stringham and LDS Church apostle Heber J. Grant. She served as a church missionary in the Western", "id": "1681853" }, { "contents": "George Mousley Cannon\n\n\nTrust Company. He served as a delegate to the 1895 Utah State Constitutional Convention and chaired the committee which formulated the articles on taxation and public debt. In 1896, Cannon was elected to the Utah State Senate and served as its first president. When The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) modified stake boundaries in 1900, dividing the new Granite Stake off from the Salt Lake Stake, Cannon became the Sunday School Superintendent of the new stake. From 1901 until after 1930, Cannon served as", "id": "8629874" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nat the University of Utah and then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received a B.S. degree in mining engineering. In 1899, Cannon began an LDS Church mission in Belgium. Cannon then served from 1900 to 1902 as president of the church's Netherlands–Belgium Mission. Cannon also served as Francis M. Lyman's secretary on a three-month trip to many nations along the Mediterranean and in the Middle East. From 1916 to 1925, Cannon served as president of the Pioneer Stake in Salt Lake City. In", "id": "2194373" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\nAbraham Hoagland Cannon (also reported as Abram H. Cannon) (March 12, 1859 – July 19, 1896) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. His parents were George Q. Cannon, a Latter Day Saints apostle, and Elizabeth Hoagland, daughter of Abraham Hoagland. Cannon studied at Deseret University. Later, he studied architecture under Obed Taylor. Cannon married Sarah A.", "id": "9035314" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nSr. and Luella Wareing. He was born at his parents' home because of the 1918 influenza pandemic. Cannon's paternal grandfather was George Q. Cannon, a Mormon pioneer and prominent leader in the LDS Church. Cannon was raised in Salt Lake City. In 1937, Cannon went on a mission for the LDS Church to Nazi Germany. He was president of a branch of the church in Berlin in 1939 when the LDS Church evacuated its missionaries from Europe at the beginning of World War II. Cannon finished his mission in", "id": "9582823" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\n. Callville was submerged when Lake Mead was filled. In 1869 and 1870, Cannon served a second mission in the Eastern United States. In April 1876, Cannon became president of the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. He served in this position until April 1, 1904. After his time as stake president, Cannon served as a patriarch in the church. Cannon was the mayor of St. George, Utah Territory in 1861 and 1862. In 1896, after Utah had become a U.S. state, he stood for election", "id": "7202652" }, { "contents": "Donald Q. Cannon\n\n\nDonald Quayle Cannon (born 1936) is a retired professor at Brigham Young University who specializes in Mormon history, particularly early Mormon history and international Mormon history. As a young man, Cannon was a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Germany. Cannon earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Utah. Cannon holds a Ph.D. from Clark University. In the late 1960s, he taught at the University of Southern Maine. In the LDS Church he has", "id": "10057919" }, { "contents": "George Goddard (Mormon)\n\n\nwas the clerk to LDS Church presiding bishop Edward Hunter. From 1874 to 1884, Goddard was the clerk of the LDS Church's biannual general conferences. In 1872, Goddard became the inaugural first assistant to George Q. Cannon, the first superintendent of the Deseret Sunday School Union. Goddard served in this capacity for 26 years, until his death in 1899. Goddard was also a member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and a patriarch in the church. He died in Salt Lake City and was buried at Salt Lake City Cemetery.", "id": "7701639" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nuntil their arrival in Utah. In 1854, Cannon went on a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to the Eastern United States, where he assisted John Taylor in publishing a periodical entitled \"The Mormon\". He also preached and baptized in Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware. Cannon returned to Utah Territory due to the troubles connected with the Utah War. In 1864, Cannon helped establish Call's Landing on the Colorado River, later known as Callville, Nevada", "id": "7202651" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nJanath Russell Cannon (October 28, 1918 – July 5, 2007) was a counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was also a prominent missionary in the church and was among the first to preach to black people in Africa. Born in Ogden, Utah, Janath Russell was educated at Wellesley College. In 1941, she married Edwin Q. Cannon in the Salt Lake Temple. From 1971 to 1974,", "id": "9582964" }, { "contents": "Joseph A. Cannon\n\n\nserved as an assistant administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from 1983 to 1985. Joseph A. Cannon was born on July 31, 1949. Cannon served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Ireland, including on the Isle of Man, the ancestral homeland of the Cannons. Cannon received a degree in political science and, in 1977, a law degree from Brigham Young University. Cannon served as a law clerk in Salt Lake City for U.S. District", "id": "7202830" }, { "contents": "Elaine A. Cannon\n\n\nElaine Anderson Cannon (April 9, 1922 – May 19, 2003) was the eighth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 to 1984. Cannon has been a writer and an editor and is the author of over 50 books. Elaine Anderson was born to Aldon Joseph and Minnie Egan Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a teenager, she started writing a daily column aimed at teenagers for the \"Deseret News\". She", "id": "1682052" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nAdele Morris Cannon Howells (January 11, 1886 – April 14, 1951) was the fourth general president of the Primary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1943 until her death of rheumatic heart disease. She contributed to \"The Children's Friend\" magazine, as well as the fundraising for the Children's Primary Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. Adele Morris Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to George Mousley Cannon and Marian Adelaide Morris. She", "id": "1336419" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\nGeorgius Young Cannon (March 6, 1892 – March 29, 1987) was a 20th-century architect in the American West who operated principally out of Salt Lake City, Utah. Cannon trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), graduating in 1918. He then joined the army and later returned to Utah to intern with the architectural firm Ware & Treganza and Cannon & Fetzer. He served two missions to Germany for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). For a time", "id": "12786285" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Quayle Cannon (January 11, 1827 – April 12, 1901) was an early member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), and served in the First Presidency under four successive presidents of the church: Brigham Young, John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. He was the church's chief political strategist, and was dubbed \"the Mormon premier\" and \"the Mormon Richelieu\" by the press. He was also a five", "id": "19825263" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nwas the oldest of nine children, and her father George Cannon was the first president of the Utah State Senate. As a child, Cannon suffered from rheumatic fever. She enjoyed reading in her spare time and horseback riding. She was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Cannon attended schools in Salt Lake City and graduated from the LDS High School and Business College in 1903. She attended the University of Utah and studied physical education and graduated with her bachelor's degree in 1909. Cannon", "id": "1336420" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nis one of the few general authorities of the LDS Church to have been excommunicated. From 1889 until 1892, Cannon was the editor of the \"Ogden Standard\". From October 1892 until April 1898, he was the editor in chief of the \"Deseret News\". After the Spanish–American War he returned to work at the \"Deseret News\" and served as an executive editor of the newspaper off-and-on until his death. He was much beloved by his co-workers. Cannon was a member", "id": "7202722" }, { "contents": "Tracy Y. Cannon\n\n\nLatter-day Saints. In 1939, he was made second assistant to Melvin J. Ballard, supervisor of the committee. From 1915 to 1927, Cannon was a member of the high council of the Pioneer Stake of the LDS Church. In 1917, he became a member of the Deseret Sunday School Union General Board. From 1930 through 1936, Cannon was bishop of the Cannon Ward in Salt Lake City. Cannon was an editor of the 1927 LDS Church hymnal. In 1925, Cannon was appointed director of the McCune School", "id": "12019030" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe church's Welsh-language periodical, \"Udgorn Seion\". From 1867 to 1874, Cannon was the managing editor of the \"Deseret News\". It was under his direction that the newspaper was first published on a daily basis. In 1866, Cannon began publication of a magazine for youth and young adult Latter-day Saints called \"The Juvenile Instructor\". He owned and published this magazine until his death; in 1901 his family sold the magazine to the LDS Church's Sunday School organization. The periodical was", "id": "19825272" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nCannon and her husband were heads of the Switzerland Mission of the LDS Church. Upon their return to Utah in 1974, Cannon became the first counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the church's Relief Society. Cannon served in this capacity until 1978, when she was released so that she and her husband could become the first missionaries of the church to preach in \"black Africa\". They — along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey — preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 27", "id": "9582965" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\nan LDS Church organization responsible for educating young members of the LDS church, and the magazine was the first church periodical oriented toward youth. Cannon opened the George Q. Cannon & Sons bookstore in 1867 to sell the magazine and other publications of an uplifting nature. Cannon believed that secular novels did not reflect Latter-day Saint values. In the 1880s, Cannon expanded with a branch in Ogden, Utah. It is not known how many books Cannon & Sons actually published itself. In this era, authors commonly self-published", "id": "18344085" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n. Cannon was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. Cannon fathered 32 children, some of whom are Abraham H. Cannon, John Q. Cannon, and Sylvester Q. Cannon, who all became general authorities of the LDS Church; Frank J. Cannon, Utah's first U.S. Senator; and Lewis T. Cannon and Georgius Y. Cannon, prominent architects in Utah. Some of Cannon's prominent descendants include Howard Cannon, U.S. Senator from Nevada from 1959 to 1983 and Chris Cannon, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1997 to", "id": "19825281" }, { "contents": "Salt Lake City Council Hall\n\n\nwho was then the official architect for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Built at First South and 120 East (more on Salt Lake City's coordinate system), sandstone for the structure was delivered from Red Butte Canyon on Utah's first chartered railroad. The well-furnished Greek revival building was completed at a cost of $70,000. In January 1866, City Hall was dedicated by George Q. Cannon, a prominent LDS leader. Many other LDS leaders attended the dedication including Brigham", "id": "19382830" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\n, Cannon moved to Los Angeles and worked as the office manager of his MIT schoolmate Wallace Neff. He later returned to Utah and designed numerous buildings, mostly residences, and some of which remain on the National Register of Historic Places. Among his works were meetinghouses of the LDS Church and other civic buildings. Cannon served on a church-appointed board of six architects that oversaw the construction of the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple. Cannon was the youngest of 32 children born to LDS Church leader George Q. Cannon. His mother,", "id": "12786286" }, { "contents": "Karl G. Maeser\n\n\nin the General Superintendency of the Deseret Sunday School Union. He was the Second Assistant to General Superintendent George Q. Cannon from July 1894 to January 1899. He then served as the First Assistant to Cannon from January 1899 until February 1901. Maeser also participated in the Utah constitutional convention after Abraham Smoot's death in 1895. He proposed an article to support prohibition, but later backed down. Missionaries from the LDS Church were removed from California in 1858 due to the Utah War. Missionary work resumed in 1892. Maeser presided over", "id": "11030473" }, { "contents": "Frank B. Woodbury\n\n\nFrank Bartlett Woodbury (December 27, 1867 – December 21, 1962) was a leader of and an Acting Presiding Patriarch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), one of only three church members to hold this position in church history. Born in St. George, Utah Territory, to Orin Nelson Woodbury and Ann Cannon, Woodbury served in many capacities in the church on a local level. Some, but not all, LDS Church sources list Woodbury as \"Acting Presiding Patriarch\" of", "id": "8238754" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand 1958 and served three full terms. From 1964 to 1971, Cannon was a bishop of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. From 1971 to 1974, he was the president of the Switzerland Mission of the church. In 1978, three weeks after the LDS Church announced that it would no longer impose restrictions of black people receiving the priesthood or participating in temple ordinances, Cannon traveled to Africa on behalf of the church with Merrill J. Bateman to assess the prospects for church missionary work and growth in \"black Africa\"", "id": "9582825" }, { "contents": "Amasa Lyman\n\n\n). Lyman served as the first mayor of San Bernardino. In 1860, Young appointed three of the twelve apostles—Lyman, Charles C. Rich, and George Q. Cannon—to the presidency of the church's European Mission. On March 16, 1862, Lyman preached a sermon in Dundee, Scotland, which all but denied the reality of and the necessity for the atonement of Jesus Christ, which is a central tenet of the LDS Church. His speech appeared to have been overlooked for years, but on January 21", "id": "12068047" }, { "contents": "Mark E. Petersen\n\n\nMark Edward Petersen (November 7, 1900 – January 11, 1984) was an American news editor and religious leader who served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1944 until his death. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, he filled the vacancy in the Quorum caused by the excommunication of Richard R. Lyman. Petersen had become managing editor of the church-owned \"Deseret News\" in 1935 and editor in 1941.", "id": "2692480" }, { "contents": "Thomas C. Griggs\n\n\nthe LDS Church's Aaronic priesthood; his call to this office was given by Apostle George Q. Cannon. With the outbreak of the American Civil War, the Griggs heeded the counsel of LDS Church leaders to move to Utah Territory. The Griggs crossed the plains in Joseph Horne's Mormon pioneer company in 1861. Griggs first joined the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in 1866 when Charles John Thomas was the director. Griggs would continue as a member of the choir until his death in 1903. While Robert Sands was the conductor of the choir", "id": "9481149" }, { "contents": "Charles Clarence Neslen\n\n\nfrom Germany and he was imprisoned in Danzig. He served as president of the Königsberg District of the LDS Church for a part of his mission. Neslen was a member of the Democratic Party and a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1912. Neslen worked a total of 15 years for the \"Deseret News\". He was also a realtor and for a time served as secretary of the Salt Lake Real Estate Association. On October 26, 1905, Neslen married Grace T. Cannon, a daughter of George Q. Cannon.", "id": "21092533" }, { "contents": "Stephen L. Chipman\n\n\nStephen L. Chipman (1864–1945) was a member of the Utah State Legislature in 1903 and a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Utah County. He was also the first president of the Salt Lake Temple who was not also an apostle in the LDS Church. Chipman studied at Brigham Young Academy (the predecessor of Brigham Young University (BYU)) as a youth. From 1885 to 1887 he served as a Mormon missionary in the Southern States Mission of the LDS Church", "id": "15228384" }, { "contents": "Mountain Meadows massacre and Mormon public relations\n\n\nCannon, then president of the LDS California Mission. In the October 13, 1857 edition of Cannon's San Francisco newspaper \"The Western Standard\", Cannon responded to initial news reports of involvement by Mormons by charging the responsible journalists with writing \"reckless and malignant slanders\", despite knowing that the southern Utah Mormons were \"as innocent of [the massacre] as the child unborn\". The church's official newspaper in Salt Lake City, \"The Deseret News\", was initially slow to comment on the massacre,", "id": "22212632" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas the second-most senior apostle of the church after the death of Woodruff, Cannon did not become President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, as would be the practice in the LDS Church today. Rather, because Cannon was a member of the First Presidency, the church simply appointed the next senior apostle of the church—Brigham Young, Jr.—to be the quorum president. (Under today's practices, Cannon would have been appointed the president of the quorum and Young would have been appointed acting president.) Cannon", "id": "19825274" }, { "contents": "Clifford E. Young\n\n\nClifford Earle Young (December 7, 1883 – August 21, 1958) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1941 until his death. Young was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, the son of LDS Church leader Seymour B. Young. From 1905 to 1908, he served as a Mormon missionary in England and Germany. In 1928, Young became the president of the Alpine Stake of the LDS Church in Utah. In 1934, he joined the", "id": "8315768" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n33. Upon his joining the Quorum of the Twelve, Cannon was called to preside over the church's European Mission. Cannon's mission in Europe ended when he was recalled by Young in 1862 to work in Washington, D.C., to assist in the church's promotion of Utah Territory's bid for statehood. At the adjournment of the 1862 congressional session, Cannon again left for Europe to preside over the mission. In this capacity, Cannon was the editor of the \"Millennial Star\" and, for a short time,", "id": "19825271" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nfrom the federal authorities. In September 1888, Cannon surrendered himself and pleaded guilty at trial to charges of unlawful cohabitation under the Edmunds Act. As a result, Cannon served nearly six months in Utah's federal penitentiary. Cannon was pardoned in 1894 by U.S. President Grover Cleveland. Cannon died on April 12, 1901, in Monterey, California, at 74 years of age. Had he lived a few months longer, he would have become the President of the LDS Church: Lorenzo Snow died on October 10 of that year", "id": "19825280" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Isle of Man\n\n\nand Idaho which descends from the 19th century marriage of George Cannon and Ann Quayle before their emigration from Peel, Isle of Man. The family's most notable member was their oldest son George Quayle Cannon. The family is connected by marriage to the Bennion, Taylor, Wells and Young political families. LDS Membership statistics as of January 1, 2011 for the Isle of Man. The nation of the Isle of Man does not have its own mission. Instead it is served by an English mission. Five out of the six", "id": "7797107" }, { "contents": "The Contributor (LDS magazine)\n\n\nThe Contributor was an independent publication associated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) between 1879 and 1896. It was a monthly periodical and sought to represent the Young Men's and Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Associations (YMMIA and YLMIA respectively), the youth organizations of the LDS Church at the time. It was founded by Junius F. Wells, the inaugural head of the YMMIA. Abraham H. Cannon became editor when the magazine was purchased by the Cannon Publishing Company in 1892. With the", "id": "505110" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe official organ of the Sunday School until 1930, when it was replaced with \"The Instructor\". Cannon also served as the first general superintendent of the church's Sunday School from 1867 until his death. On April 8, 1873, Cannon became a member of the church's First Presidency when he was called as the first counselor by Brigham Young. Cannon went on to serve as counselor to three more presidents of the church: he was First Counselor to John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. Although Cannon", "id": "19825273" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\ntogether. Prior to her service in the general Primary presidency, Clara Cannon was a counselor in the presidencies of the Primary and Relief Society in the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. When Louie B. Felt became the first general presidency of the Primary, Matilda M. Barratt and Cannon were selected as Felt's counselors. Cannon was a counselor until 1895; the next year she was succeeded in the position by Josephine R. West. Clara Moses Cannon died of throat cancer in Centerville, Utah, aged 87 and was interred in", "id": "10663424" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nScouts of America and served in the organization's Great Salt Lake Council. Prior to his call as a general authority, Cannon served in the church as a bishop, stake president, patriarch, temple sealer, and regional representative. He was also the president of the church's Central British Mission from 1966 to 1969. From 1969 to 1972, Cannon was an assistant and counselor to W. Jay Eldredge, the general superintendent of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association. Cannon became a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy", "id": "8339580" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe Nauvoo Legion. During this time, Cannon served as printer of the \"Deseret News\" while it was publishing in exile in Fillmore, Utah. After the Utah War, he was called as president of the church's Eastern States Mission. The murder of Parley P. Pratt in 1857 created a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. That vacancy was not filled until Brigham Young called Cannon to the apostleship three years later. Cannon was ordained to the priesthood office of apostle on August 26, 1860, at age", "id": "19825270" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nin the Sandwich Islands (later known as the Kingdom of Hawaii), where he served for four years. While in the islands, Cannon converted many Native Hawaiians. One of the most notable was Jonatana Napela, who assisted Cannon in translating the Book of Mormon into Hawaiian. Joseph F. Smith, a future church president, would follow Cannon and serve in Hawaii one year later. Returning to Utah Territory, Cannon married Elizabeth Hoagland (daughter of Abraham Hoagland and his wife.) He was almost immediately called to assist apostle", "id": "19825268" }, { "contents": "Ronald E. Poelman\n\n\nRonald Eugene Poelman (May 10, 1928 – November 19, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 until his death. In 1984, he delivered a controversial sermon in the LDS Church's general conference which the church redacted before publishing. Poelman was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to a Latter-day Saint family. As a young man, he served as a Mormon missionary in the LDS Church's Netherlands Mission. He began his", "id": "4765396" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\n. He would marry Martha Brown of Ogden in 1878. In 1891 he helped to organize the Utah Republican Party. After a failed bid to become delegate from the Utah Territory, he succeeded and served from March 4, 1895, to January 4, 1896. Cannon was chosen in 1896 to serve as senator by the Utah Legislature in spite of LDS church leadership favoring his father for the job. He served in the United States Senate, initially, as a member of the Republican Party; however, he later became a", "id": "11000346" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nmember of the Silver Republican Party, founded by his successor (and future employer at \"The Salt Lake Tribune\") Thomas Kearns. Cannon lost re-election in 1899. Utah's state legislators indicated they would not support Cannon for re-election shortly after the November 1898 elections. Cannon had voted against the Dingley Act, which would have raised tariffs on sugar and helped the Utah sugar industry. It was strongly supported by the LDS Church hierarchy, who now opposed his re-election. Other factors were his support", "id": "11000347" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand Ghana. The first convert baptized in Africa was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and his wife were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' centre in Nauvoo, Illinois. For three months in 1989, Cannon was the interim president of the LDS Church's Germany Hamburg Mission; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. After his interim service as mission president, Cannon was the second president of the Frankfurt Germany Temple from 1989 to", "id": "9582827" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nCounselor to William B. Preston, the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church; he served in this position between 1884 and 1886. In 1884, shortly after Cannon had become a general authority, a sensationalized news story by Joseph Lippman in the \"Salt Lake Tribune\" alleged that Cannon had taken his wife's sister Louie Wells as a plural wife. Lippman suggested that Cannon and Wells had been married in the Logan Temple. In fact, there had been no such marriage, though it was later revealed that Cannon and Wells had", "id": "7202724" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nbranches of the LDS Church in Nigeria and Ghana. The first convert baptized in Nigeria was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and her husband were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' center in Nauvoo, Illinois. In 1989, they served as interim leaders of the Germany Hamburg Mission of the church; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. From 1989 to 1992, Cannon was the matron of the Frankfurt Germany Temple while her husband", "id": "9582966" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\n's Quorum of the Twelve. Abraham was a son of George Q. Cannon, an early member of the church's First Presidency. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary in the church's Central States Mission. After his mission, he served in the United States Air Force during the Second World War. In 1946, he began attending Brigham Young University (BYU). After graduating from BYU, Cannon became a vice president of Beneficial Life Insurance Company in Salt Lake City. He was active in the Boy", "id": "8339579" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\n1925, Cannon became the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church, succeeding Charles W. Nibley. Cannon's counselors were David A. Smith and John Wells. In 1938, Cannon was released as Presiding Bishop and was succeeded by LeGrand Richards. At the same time, Cannon was ordained an apostle and made an \"associate\" of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, a unique position that had never been filled before. When Quorum member Melvin J. Ballard died the next year, Cannon became a full member of the Quorum; he served", "id": "2194374" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\nClarissa Cordelia (\"Clara\") Moses Cannon (April 21, 1839 – August 21, 1926) was a Mormon pioneer and a member of the first-ever general presidency of the Primary organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). She was the second counselor to general president Louie B. Felt from 1880 to 1895. Clara Moses was born in Westfield, Massachusetts. In 1846 she took the six-month journey on the ship \"Brooklyn\" from New York City to San", "id": "10663422" }, { "contents": "Leonora Cannon Taylor\n\n\nLeonora Cannon Taylor (October 6, 1796–December 9, 1868) was a member of the Relief Society organization at the time of its origin and the first wife of John Taylor, the third president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). On October 6, 1796 in Peel, Isle of Man, Leonora Cannon was born to George Cannon and Leonora Callister. As the oldest daughter in the family, when Leonora's father died when she was thirteen she went away to London to work", "id": "16190675" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\ntheir books, which were then distributed by others. However, Cannon & Sons distributed several important books through their stores and mail order (see table). The company had extensive ties to the LDS Church-owned newspaper, the \"Deseret News.\" Five of Cannon's sons held important positions in the paper, and Cannon himself was editor between 1867 and 1872, and again while temporarily owning the paper from 1892 to 1898. Nearly every George Q. Cannon & Sons book was printed on the \"Deseret News\" press", "id": "18344086" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nof the Utah Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Cannon was the oldest son of George Q. Cannon and the one most expected to follow in his prominent father's footsteps in politics, church office, and journalism. Heber J. Grant once said of Cannon: \"There probably is not a young man in the church who had had more opportunities and advantages extended to him educationally, spiritually, and every other way than John Q. Cannon.\" At the age of 27, Cannon was called to serve as the Second", "id": "7202723" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nMartha Maria \"Mattie\" Hughes Cannon (July 1, 1857 – July 10, 1932) was a Welsh-born immigrant to the United States, a polygamous wife, physician, Utah women's rights advocate and suffragist, and Utah State Senator. Her family immigrated to the United States as converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and traveled West to settle in Utah territory with other Mormons. She started working at the age of fourteen. At sixteen she enrolled in the University", "id": "15993465" }, { "contents": "Church Office Building\n\n\nThe Church Office Building is a 28-story building in Salt Lake City, Utah, which houses the administrative support staff for the lay ministry of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) throughout the world. The building is 420 ft (128 m) tall at roof level and is located within the Temple Square complex on the corner of North Temple and State Street. The building was designed by George Cannon Young at a cost of US$31 million to build. Construction took place from 1962 to 1972", "id": "13754819" }, { "contents": "John Lyman Smith\n\n\nJohn Lyman Smith (November 17, 1828 – February 21, 1898) was an American politician and Mormon missionary. He served as a member of the Utah Territory's Legislative Assembly's House of Representatives for Iron County, Utah, from 1852 to 1853, and the Great Salt Lake County, Utah, from 1853 to 1855. Cousin of the founder of the Latter Day Saint Movement, Joseph Smith, Smith was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) who traveled to the", "id": "18219861" }, { "contents": "Francis M. Lyman\n\n\nFrancis Marion Lyman (January 12, 1840 – November 18, 1916) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was the President of the Quorum from 1903 until his death. Lyman's father and son were also apostles in the church: his father was Amasa M. Lyman and his son was Richard R. Lyman. Both his father and son were excommunicated from the church while serving as apostles. Francis M. Lyman was born as", "id": "20761093" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nAngus Munn Cannon (May 17, 1834 – June 7, 1915) was an early Latter Day Saint leader and Mormon pioneer. Cannon was born in Liverpool, Lancashire, England. His Manx parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 1840, being baptized by his uncle John Taylor. In 1842, the Cannon family went to Nauvoo, Illinois, United States. By 1849, they were in Utah Territory. Cannon was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon and their lives followed very similar paths up", "id": "7202650" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\naffairs while Taylor recovered. This training would serve him well in later life. Cannon's father died in 1845. In 1846, Taylor traveled to England to organize the affairs of the church after Smith's death. Meanwhile, Cannon accompanied Taylor's wife and family as they moved to Winter Quarters, Nebraska. When Taylor returned, Cannon traveled with the entire Taylor family to the Salt Lake Valley, arriving in October 1847. In 1849, Cannon was asked by church president Brigham Young to serve as a missionary for the church", "id": "19825267" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nstaying in the position until December 31, 1903. Cannon attempted to prohibit children not vaccinated from attending school in case of a disease outbreak. The Board of Health sent out vaccines; however, the \"Deseret News\" spread information that vaccines weren't safe. LDS Church leaders were divided on the subject. One apostle, Brigham Young Jr. was very vocal in his opinions, writing in the \"Deseret News\" about the evils of vaccinations. The influence of the \"Deseret News\" and Mormon religious leaders limited how many", "id": "15993490" }, { "contents": "Billy Johnson (Mormon)\n\n\nLDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball announced Official Declaration 2 which extended the priesthood to all worthy male members of the church regardless of race or color. In gratitude, Johnson sent a letter to Kimball, explaining that God had prepared the people in Ghana, asking him to send missionaries to the members. Kimball responded to his pleas and sent the first called missionaries Rendell N. Mabey and Rachel Mabey. They joined Edwin Q. Cannon and Janath R. Cannon. Johnson was finally baptized into the LDS Church on December 9, 1978. He", "id": "4108521" }, { "contents": "Juvenile Instructor\n\n\ncatechisms on the Bible, Book of Mormon, and Doctrine and Covenants; musical compositions; illustrations; stories; editorial teachings; and other aids to gospel instruction. It was the first magazine for children published in the United States west of the Mississippi River. For much of its history, \"The Juvenile Instructor\" was owned by the Cannon family. Its first editor was George Q. Cannon, an apostle in the LDS Church. Cannon and his family continued to publish the magazine privately until January 1, 1901, when the", "id": "9210614" }, { "contents": "Joseph F. Smith\n\n\nand as second counselor to Lorenzo Snow (1898–1901). Smith was appointed first counselor to Snow on the death of first counselor George Q. Cannon, but, as Snow himself died only four days later, Smith never served in that position. He succeeded Snow as president of the LDS Church and president of the Salt Lake Temple. He served as president of the temple until 1911, when he transferred the responsibility to Anthon H. Lund. Smith also served as editor of the \"Improvement Era\" and \"Juvenile Instructor\",", "id": "4117444" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in California\n\n\nQ. Cannon began publication in San Francisco of the \"Western Standard\", a weekly periodical supportive of the Church. The first colonization from Utah to California came in 1851 when a company of about 450 saints and slaves under direction of Elders Amasa M. Lyman and Charles C. Rich of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles settled at what is now San Bernardino. The colony was the final settlement in a string of Mormon communities extending from Salt Lake City in an area known as Deseret. The community thrived, and on July 6,", "id": "22187256" }, { "contents": "Sunday School (LDS Church)\n\n\nout. On November 11, 1867, Young and church leaders Daniel H. Wells, George A. Smith, Wilford Woodruff, George Q. Cannon, and Brigham Young, Jr. met and organized the Parent Sunday School Union. Young appointed Cannon as the first general superintendent of the Sunday School, a position he would hold until his death in 1901. In 1872, the Sunday School organization was renamed the Deseret Sunday School Union. The organized Sunday School addressed lesson topics and source materials, grading, prizes and rewards, use of hymns", "id": "8671425" }, { "contents": "Hugh W. Pinnock\n\n\nHugh Wallace Pinnock (January 15, 1934 – December 16, 2000) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Pinnock was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Western States Mission. Pinnock graduated from University of Utah in 1958, where he became a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity and Owl and Key. Prior to his call to the First", "id": "8519001" }, { "contents": "Charles W. Penrose\n\n\nwas organized Penrose was called as a member of the high council. In 1877, Penrose became the assistant editor of the LDS Church-owned \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, working under George Q. Cannon. Penrose was known for his writing, including missionary tracts and lyrics of Latter-day Saint hymns, including \"God of Our Fathers\", \"O Ye Mountains High\", and \"Up, Awake, Ye Defenders of Zion\". In 1880, Penrose became the editor-in-chief of", "id": "2194239" }, { "contents": "Rulon S. Wells\n\n\nRulon Seymour Wells (July 7, 1854 – May 7, 1941) was a Utah politician and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1893 until his death. Wells was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to LDS Church leader Daniel H. Wells (1814–1891) and Louisa Free (1824–1886). In 1875, Wells travelled to Europe as a Mormon missionary and worked primarily in Germany and Switzerland. He returned to the United States in 1877. On", "id": "8315459" }, { "contents": "G. Homer Durham\n\n\nGeorge Homer Durham (February 4, 1911 – January 10, 1985) was an American academic administrator and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Durham was born in Parowan, Utah, and was raised in Salt Lake City. As a boy in grade school, he met and became lifelong friends with future LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley. As a young man, Durham served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the British", "id": "21588256" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nJonatana Napela or Jonathan Hawaii Napela (first name also spelled Iohatana, full name Napelakapuonamahanaonaleleonalani) (September 11, 1813 – August 6, 1879) was one of the earliest Hawaiian converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Hawaii, joining in the 1830s. He helped translate the Book of Mormon into the Hawaiian language, as \"Ka Buke a Moramona,\" working with missionary George Q. Cannon. Napela was appointed to serve as a superintendent of the colony at Kalaupapa, Molokai", "id": "16647246" }, { "contents": "Richfield, Utah\n\n\nserves about 600 students per year. As in most settled areas of rural Utah, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) plays a prominent role. The Mormons were highly industrious colonizers. From 1847, when they founded Salt Lake City, until 1877, they founded 360 towns. Following direction from Brigham Young, Latter-day Saints founded the town and outlying hamlets about 150 years ago. Members of the LDS Church are predominant among the residents. Even in this heart of Mormon country,", "id": "11082836" }, { "contents": "Marvin O. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Owen Ashton (April 8, 1883 – October 7, 1946) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1938 until his death. Prior to becoming a general authority, Ashton was a prominent local leader of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City, Utah. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Mormon parents. He married Rachel Grace Jeremy in 1906 and in 1907 went to England as a missionary for the LDS Church. He returned", "id": "14505232" }, { "contents": "LeGrand Richards\n\n\nLeGrand Richards (February 6, 1886 – January 11, 1983) was a prominent missionary and leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He served as the seventh presiding bishop of the LDS Church from 1938 to 1952, and was then called as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles by church president David O. McKay. Richards served in the Quorum of the Twelve until his death in Salt Lake City, Utah, at the age of 96. Richards was born in", "id": "2294374" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nwas educated at Lahainaluna School. Napela was trained as a lawyer. He was serving as a judge in Wailuku, Hawaii, when he met American George Q. Cannon, a member of the LDS Church on a missionary trip to Hawaii. After Napela's conversion in the 1830s to the LDS Church, the government forced the judge to resign from his position. The LDS Church was regarded with suspicion. LDS Church historian Andrew Jensen said that Napela \"did splendid missionary work for the Church.\" Napela was sent on a specific", "id": "16647248" }, { "contents": "Gardo House\n\n\ncounselor George Q. Cannon and other church leaders suggested that Taylor occupy the Gardo House after its completion, but he repeatedly refused. However, when church members unanimously voted on April 9, 1879, to make the Gardo House the official parsonage for LDS Church presidents, Taylor reluctantly accepted their decision. Moses Thatcher, William Jennings, and Angus M. Cannon were appointed as a committee to oversee completion of the mansion. On December 27, 1881, the Deseret News published a letter from John Taylor announcing a public reception and tour of", "id": "1496184" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nStates Mission of the church in 1901. In 1902, Grant married George J. Cannon. In 1923, Cannon was asked to succeed Mae Taylor Nystrom as the second counselor to Martha Horne Tingey, the general president of what was then called the Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Association. In 1929, when Ruth May Fox succeeded Tingey, Cannon was asked to be her first counselor. Cannon served in this capacity until 1929, when Fox was released and Cannon was selected by her father, who was President of the Church, to", "id": "1681854" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\n. (At the time, Cannon was a counselor to James E. Faust in the church's International Mission, which had jurisdiction over all areas of the world not otherwise part of a mission.) After Bateman and Cannon reported the results of their trip, Cannon and his wife were called and set apart as the first Mormon missionaries to black Africa. They—along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey—preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 35 branches and 5 districts of the LDS Church in Nigeria", "id": "9582826" }, { "contents": "Marion D. Hanks\n\n\nMarion Duff Hanks (October 13, 1921 – August 5, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1953 until his death. Hanks was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man he served in the Northern States Mission of the LDS Church, which was headquartered in Chicago. He was in the United States Navy during World War II and received a J.D. from the University of Utah. Prior to his call as a general authority", "id": "6558935" }, { "contents": "Lillie T. Freeze\n\n\nthe Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association (YLMIA). In this capacity, she was invited to speak at the Salt Lake Tabernacle on April 6, 1880, at a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the LDS Church's founding. In 1880, Lillie Freeze was one of the founding members of the LDS Church's Primary Association. Freeze was appointed as the first secretary of the general presidency, which was composed of Louie B. Felt, Matilda M. Barratt, and Clara C. M. Cannon. Freeze was secretary until 1888, when", "id": "10906695" }, { "contents": "Henry D. Taylor\n\n\nHenry Dixon Taylor (November 22, 1903 – February 24, 1987) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1958 until his death. Taylor was born in Provo, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Eastern States Mission. During his mission, Taylor was the president of the church's Connecticut District. Taylor received a bachelor's degree from Brigham Young University (BYU) and a master's degree", "id": "2477100" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas elected to be the non-voting delegate for Utah Territory in the United States Congress in 1872. He remained a congressional delegate until 1882, when his seat was declared vacant by the enactment of the Edmunds Act, which terminated many political and civil rights for Utah's Mormon polygamists. By 1880, Cannon had served four terms in Congress as Territorial Delegate. The newly appointed anti-Mormon territorial governor, Eli Houston Murray, openly supported the Liberal Party, which generally opposed church candidates. The 1880 territory-wide election", "id": "19825275" }, { "contents": "George F. Richards\n\n\nGeorge Franklin Richards (February 23, 1861 – August 8, 1950) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from April 9, 1906 until his death. He also served as Acting Presiding Patriarch of the LDS Church from 1937 to 1942 and President of the Quorum of the Twelve from May 25, 1945 until his death. Richards was born in Farmington, Utah Territory, the son of Franklin D. Richards and Nanny Longstroth. Richards", "id": "2194252" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\n1882, at the age of 23, Cannon assumed business control of the \"Juvenile Instructor\" and associated publications. He continued his management until his death. In October 1892, Cannon and his brother John Q. Cannon took control of the \"Deseret News\" publishing. He also became the editor and publisher of \"The Contributor\". On October 9, 1882, Cannon became a member of the First Seven Presidents of the Seventy of the church. On October 7, 1889, church president Wilford Woodruff named Cannon a member", "id": "9035316" }, { "contents": "Howard Cannon\n\n\nHis grandfather David Cannon, was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon, and a leading figure in the building of the St. George Temple, who was later the third president of that temple. His father Walter Cannon was one of David Cannon's 31 children. Howard's parents had married in 1909, his mother was Leah Sullivan. When Cannon was two years old his father left for England to served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for two years. Cannon went to Woodward School in", "id": "18060013" }, { "contents": "Mormon fiction\n\n\nMormons were generally non-fiction, including scripture, missionary tracts, and doctrinal literature. In 1844, Parley P. Pratt published what is commonly cited as the first work of LDS fiction, the didactic \"Dialogue between Joseph Smith and the Devil\". It was first published in the New York Herald. Early Mormon leaders like Brigham Young and George Q. Cannon condemned novels for wasting time, a rhetoric that persisted until the 1880s. Fiction among LDS Church members developed once the Mormons had settled in Utah and developed a degree of", "id": "453087" }, { "contents": "Marvin J. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Jeremy Ashton (May 6, 1915 – February 25, 1994) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1971 until his death. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was the son of Marvin O. Ashton, a local LDS leader, who later became a church general authority. The younger Ashton worked in the lumber business as a youth. He graduated from the University of Utah. He served a", "id": "19825413" }, { "contents": "Rudger Clawson\n\n\nRudger Judd Clawson (March 12, 1857 – June 21, 1943) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1898 until his death in 1943. He also served as President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1921 until his death and as a member of the First Presidency of the LDS Church for five days in 1901. Clawson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to Hiram Bradley Clawson and Margaret Judd", "id": "9035430" }, { "contents": "Utah-Idaho Sugar Company\n\n\npayment and a $130,000 loan. Cutler also went to Chicago and New York City to secure loans from banks; he came back, via train, with a bag full of money, as he did not think any banks in Utah could have cashed the large bank draft. The LDS church made more payments and secured more loans. In addition, George Q. Cannon and Heber J. Grant personally funded the enterprise. Joseph F. Smith, president of the LDS Church, gave a sermon in 1893 explaining that this was done to", "id": "1319991" }, { "contents": "President of the Church (LDS Church)\n\n\nthe President of the Quorum. When Woodruff died, his counselors returned to the Quorum based on the date they were ordained an apostle, placing George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith below Brigham Young Jr. and John Willard Young. Heber J. Grant objected to that arguing that seniority should be based on ordination to the Quorum rather than ordination as an apostle. Young argued that an apostle should not be demoted as long as he is worthy of the position. On March 31, 1900, Snow met with his counselors, Cannon and", "id": "16343191" }, { "contents": "Alfred W. McCune\n\n\n. Judge Orlando Powers, Associate Justice of the Utah Supreme Court, said in 1906 that he understood that McCune was not a Mormon. Frank J. Cannon, too, claimed McCune was not a Mormon, and B. H. Roberts, LDS Church historian and member of the First Council of the Seventy, said in 1930 that McCune was not a church member. Historian Orvin Malmquist, however, says that church records show he was baptized into the LDS Church at the age of eight in 1857, and that his marriage to Elizabeth", "id": "15062757" } ]
Joseph Jenne Cannon ( May 22 , 1877 -- November 5 , 1945 ) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ( LDS Church ) . He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family . As a young man , Cannon served as a for the LDS Church in Europe . He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903 . Lyman and Cannon also similarly dedicated [START_ENT] Finland [END_ENT] in 1903 . In the 1908 election , Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from . He served one term , from 1909 to 1911 . Cannon was not formally associated with any political party . From 1931 to 1934 , Cannon was the editor of the Deseret News , a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church . His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church 's British Mission . Cannon served in this capacity for three years , until 1937 . Immediately following his return to Utah , Cannon was asked to become the first assistant to George Q. Morris , the general superintendent of the church 's . Cannon served in this capacity until his death from pancreatic cancer
330688b6-67ea-468c-a6db-d9a9a7ac345a_Joseph_J._Canno:9
[{"answer": "Finland", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "10577", "title": "Finland"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nJoseph Jenne Cannon (May 22, 1877 – November 5, 1945) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Europe. He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in St. Petersburg and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903. Lyman and Cannon", "id": "13710370" }, { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nalso similarly dedicated Finland in 1903. In the 1908 election, Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. He served one term, from 1909 to 1911. Cannon was not formally associated with any political party. From 1931 to 1934, Cannon was the editor of the \"Deseret News\", a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church. His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church's British Mission. Cannon served in this", "id": "13710371" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nSylvester Quayle Cannon (June 10, 1877 – May 29, 1943) was an American businessman, engineer, and religious leader who served as the sixth presiding bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1925 to 1938 and a member of church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1939 until his death. He was the son of George Q. Cannon, an apostle and member of the church's First Presidency. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. He studied", "id": "2194372" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nJohn Quayle Cannon (April 19, 1857 – January 14, 1931) was an editor-in-chief of the \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, Utah, and a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He also served as a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army during the Spanish–American War. He was the son of LDS Church apostle George Q. Cannon and Elizabeth Hoagland. He was married to Elizabeth \"Annie\" Wells Cannon. Cannon", "id": "7202721" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nFrank Jenne Cannon (January 25, 1859July 25, 1933) was the first United States Senator from Utah, who served from 1896 to 1899. Born in Salt Lake City, he was the eldest child of Sarah Jenne Cannon and George Q. Cannon. His father was an Apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and later was a member of its First Presidency. After attending the school in Salt Lake City, he studied at University of Deseret, graduating at the age of 19", "id": "11000345" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nEdwin Quayle \"Ted\" Cannon, Jr. (May 6, 1918 – April 6, 2005) was a Utah politician and businessman and was a prominent leader and missionary in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was among the first missionaries in the LDS Church to preach to black people in Africa and was part of the first group missionaries sent to establish official congregations of the LDS Church in West Africa. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Edwin Q. Cannon,", "id": "9582822" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Ivins Cannon (March 9, 1920 – August 4, 2009) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1986 to 1991. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, Cannon was the son of George J. Cannon and Lucy Grant Cannon, a leader of the youth in the LDS Church. His maternal grandfather was Heber J. Grant, the seventh president of the LDS Church. His paternal grandfather was Abraham H. Cannon, who was a member of the church", "id": "8339578" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nLucy Grant Cannon (October 22, 1880 – May 7, 1966) was the fourth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1937 to 1948. She was a member of the general presidency of the Young Women from 1923 to 1948, serving as a counselor to two presidents. Lucy Grant was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Lucy Stringham and LDS Church apostle Heber J. Grant. She served as a church missionary in the Western", "id": "1681853" }, { "contents": "George Mousley Cannon\n\n\nTrust Company. He served as a delegate to the 1895 Utah State Constitutional Convention and chaired the committee which formulated the articles on taxation and public debt. In 1896, Cannon was elected to the Utah State Senate and served as its first president. When The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) modified stake boundaries in 1900, dividing the new Granite Stake off from the Salt Lake Stake, Cannon became the Sunday School Superintendent of the new stake. From 1901 until after 1930, Cannon served as", "id": "8629874" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nat the University of Utah and then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received a B.S. degree in mining engineering. In 1899, Cannon began an LDS Church mission in Belgium. Cannon then served from 1900 to 1902 as president of the church's Netherlands–Belgium Mission. Cannon also served as Francis M. Lyman's secretary on a three-month trip to many nations along the Mediterranean and in the Middle East. From 1916 to 1925, Cannon served as president of the Pioneer Stake in Salt Lake City. In", "id": "2194373" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\nAbraham Hoagland Cannon (also reported as Abram H. Cannon) (March 12, 1859 – July 19, 1896) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. His parents were George Q. Cannon, a Latter Day Saints apostle, and Elizabeth Hoagland, daughter of Abraham Hoagland. Cannon studied at Deseret University. Later, he studied architecture under Obed Taylor. Cannon married Sarah A.", "id": "9035314" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nSr. and Luella Wareing. He was born at his parents' home because of the 1918 influenza pandemic. Cannon's paternal grandfather was George Q. Cannon, a Mormon pioneer and prominent leader in the LDS Church. Cannon was raised in Salt Lake City. In 1937, Cannon went on a mission for the LDS Church to Nazi Germany. He was president of a branch of the church in Berlin in 1939 when the LDS Church evacuated its missionaries from Europe at the beginning of World War II. Cannon finished his mission in", "id": "9582823" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\n. Callville was submerged when Lake Mead was filled. In 1869 and 1870, Cannon served a second mission in the Eastern United States. In April 1876, Cannon became president of the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. He served in this position until April 1, 1904. After his time as stake president, Cannon served as a patriarch in the church. Cannon was the mayor of St. George, Utah Territory in 1861 and 1862. In 1896, after Utah had become a U.S. state, he stood for election", "id": "7202652" }, { "contents": "Donald Q. Cannon\n\n\nDonald Quayle Cannon (born 1936) is a retired professor at Brigham Young University who specializes in Mormon history, particularly early Mormon history and international Mormon history. As a young man, Cannon was a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Germany. Cannon earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Utah. Cannon holds a Ph.D. from Clark University. In the late 1960s, he taught at the University of Southern Maine. In the LDS Church he has", "id": "10057919" }, { "contents": "George Goddard (Mormon)\n\n\nwas the clerk to LDS Church presiding bishop Edward Hunter. From 1874 to 1884, Goddard was the clerk of the LDS Church's biannual general conferences. In 1872, Goddard became the inaugural first assistant to George Q. Cannon, the first superintendent of the Deseret Sunday School Union. Goddard served in this capacity for 26 years, until his death in 1899. Goddard was also a member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and a patriarch in the church. He died in Salt Lake City and was buried at Salt Lake City Cemetery.", "id": "7701639" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nuntil their arrival in Utah. In 1854, Cannon went on a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to the Eastern United States, where he assisted John Taylor in publishing a periodical entitled \"The Mormon\". He also preached and baptized in Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware. Cannon returned to Utah Territory due to the troubles connected with the Utah War. In 1864, Cannon helped establish Call's Landing on the Colorado River, later known as Callville, Nevada", "id": "7202651" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nJanath Russell Cannon (October 28, 1918 – July 5, 2007) was a counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was also a prominent missionary in the church and was among the first to preach to black people in Africa. Born in Ogden, Utah, Janath Russell was educated at Wellesley College. In 1941, she married Edwin Q. Cannon in the Salt Lake Temple. From 1971 to 1974,", "id": "9582964" }, { "contents": "Joseph A. Cannon\n\n\nserved as an assistant administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from 1983 to 1985. Joseph A. Cannon was born on July 31, 1949. Cannon served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Ireland, including on the Isle of Man, the ancestral homeland of the Cannons. Cannon received a degree in political science and, in 1977, a law degree from Brigham Young University. Cannon served as a law clerk in Salt Lake City for U.S. District", "id": "7202830" }, { "contents": "Elaine A. Cannon\n\n\nElaine Anderson Cannon (April 9, 1922 – May 19, 2003) was the eighth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 to 1984. Cannon has been a writer and an editor and is the author of over 50 books. Elaine Anderson was born to Aldon Joseph and Minnie Egan Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a teenager, she started writing a daily column aimed at teenagers for the \"Deseret News\". She", "id": "1682052" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nAdele Morris Cannon Howells (January 11, 1886 – April 14, 1951) was the fourth general president of the Primary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1943 until her death of rheumatic heart disease. She contributed to \"The Children's Friend\" magazine, as well as the fundraising for the Children's Primary Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. Adele Morris Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to George Mousley Cannon and Marian Adelaide Morris. She", "id": "1336419" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\nGeorgius Young Cannon (March 6, 1892 – March 29, 1987) was a 20th-century architect in the American West who operated principally out of Salt Lake City, Utah. Cannon trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), graduating in 1918. He then joined the army and later returned to Utah to intern with the architectural firm Ware & Treganza and Cannon & Fetzer. He served two missions to Germany for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). For a time", "id": "12786285" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Quayle Cannon (January 11, 1827 – April 12, 1901) was an early member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), and served in the First Presidency under four successive presidents of the church: Brigham Young, John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. He was the church's chief political strategist, and was dubbed \"the Mormon premier\" and \"the Mormon Richelieu\" by the press. He was also a five", "id": "19825263" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nwas the oldest of nine children, and her father George Cannon was the first president of the Utah State Senate. As a child, Cannon suffered from rheumatic fever. She enjoyed reading in her spare time and horseback riding. She was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Cannon attended schools in Salt Lake City and graduated from the LDS High School and Business College in 1903. She attended the University of Utah and studied physical education and graduated with her bachelor's degree in 1909. Cannon", "id": "1336420" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nis one of the few general authorities of the LDS Church to have been excommunicated. From 1889 until 1892, Cannon was the editor of the \"Ogden Standard\". From October 1892 until April 1898, he was the editor in chief of the \"Deseret News\". After the Spanish–American War he returned to work at the \"Deseret News\" and served as an executive editor of the newspaper off-and-on until his death. He was much beloved by his co-workers. Cannon was a member", "id": "7202722" }, { "contents": "Tracy Y. Cannon\n\n\nLatter-day Saints. In 1939, he was made second assistant to Melvin J. Ballard, supervisor of the committee. From 1915 to 1927, Cannon was a member of the high council of the Pioneer Stake of the LDS Church. In 1917, he became a member of the Deseret Sunday School Union General Board. From 1930 through 1936, Cannon was bishop of the Cannon Ward in Salt Lake City. Cannon was an editor of the 1927 LDS Church hymnal. In 1925, Cannon was appointed director of the McCune School", "id": "12019030" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe church's Welsh-language periodical, \"Udgorn Seion\". From 1867 to 1874, Cannon was the managing editor of the \"Deseret News\". It was under his direction that the newspaper was first published on a daily basis. In 1866, Cannon began publication of a magazine for youth and young adult Latter-day Saints called \"The Juvenile Instructor\". He owned and published this magazine until his death; in 1901 his family sold the magazine to the LDS Church's Sunday School organization. The periodical was", "id": "19825272" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nCannon and her husband were heads of the Switzerland Mission of the LDS Church. Upon their return to Utah in 1974, Cannon became the first counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the church's Relief Society. Cannon served in this capacity until 1978, when she was released so that she and her husband could become the first missionaries of the church to preach in \"black Africa\". They — along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey — preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 27", "id": "9582965" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\nan LDS Church organization responsible for educating young members of the LDS church, and the magazine was the first church periodical oriented toward youth. Cannon opened the George Q. Cannon & Sons bookstore in 1867 to sell the magazine and other publications of an uplifting nature. Cannon believed that secular novels did not reflect Latter-day Saint values. In the 1880s, Cannon expanded with a branch in Ogden, Utah. It is not known how many books Cannon & Sons actually published itself. In this era, authors commonly self-published", "id": "18344085" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n. Cannon was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. Cannon fathered 32 children, some of whom are Abraham H. Cannon, John Q. Cannon, and Sylvester Q. Cannon, who all became general authorities of the LDS Church; Frank J. Cannon, Utah's first U.S. Senator; and Lewis T. Cannon and Georgius Y. Cannon, prominent architects in Utah. Some of Cannon's prominent descendants include Howard Cannon, U.S. Senator from Nevada from 1959 to 1983 and Chris Cannon, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1997 to", "id": "19825281" }, { "contents": "Salt Lake City Council Hall\n\n\nwho was then the official architect for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Built at First South and 120 East (more on Salt Lake City's coordinate system), sandstone for the structure was delivered from Red Butte Canyon on Utah's first chartered railroad. The well-furnished Greek revival building was completed at a cost of $70,000. In January 1866, City Hall was dedicated by George Q. Cannon, a prominent LDS leader. Many other LDS leaders attended the dedication including Brigham", "id": "19382830" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\n, Cannon moved to Los Angeles and worked as the office manager of his MIT schoolmate Wallace Neff. He later returned to Utah and designed numerous buildings, mostly residences, and some of which remain on the National Register of Historic Places. Among his works were meetinghouses of the LDS Church and other civic buildings. Cannon served on a church-appointed board of six architects that oversaw the construction of the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple. Cannon was the youngest of 32 children born to LDS Church leader George Q. Cannon. His mother,", "id": "12786286" }, { "contents": "Karl G. Maeser\n\n\nin the General Superintendency of the Deseret Sunday School Union. He was the Second Assistant to General Superintendent George Q. Cannon from July 1894 to January 1899. He then served as the First Assistant to Cannon from January 1899 until February 1901. Maeser also participated in the Utah constitutional convention after Abraham Smoot's death in 1895. He proposed an article to support prohibition, but later backed down. Missionaries from the LDS Church were removed from California in 1858 due to the Utah War. Missionary work resumed in 1892. Maeser presided over", "id": "11030473" }, { "contents": "Frank B. Woodbury\n\n\nFrank Bartlett Woodbury (December 27, 1867 – December 21, 1962) was a leader of and an Acting Presiding Patriarch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), one of only three church members to hold this position in church history. Born in St. George, Utah Territory, to Orin Nelson Woodbury and Ann Cannon, Woodbury served in many capacities in the church on a local level. Some, but not all, LDS Church sources list Woodbury as \"Acting Presiding Patriarch\" of", "id": "8238754" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand 1958 and served three full terms. From 1964 to 1971, Cannon was a bishop of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. From 1971 to 1974, he was the president of the Switzerland Mission of the church. In 1978, three weeks after the LDS Church announced that it would no longer impose restrictions of black people receiving the priesthood or participating in temple ordinances, Cannon traveled to Africa on behalf of the church with Merrill J. Bateman to assess the prospects for church missionary work and growth in \"black Africa\"", "id": "9582825" }, { "contents": "Amasa Lyman\n\n\n). Lyman served as the first mayor of San Bernardino. In 1860, Young appointed three of the twelve apostles—Lyman, Charles C. Rich, and George Q. Cannon—to the presidency of the church's European Mission. On March 16, 1862, Lyman preached a sermon in Dundee, Scotland, which all but denied the reality of and the necessity for the atonement of Jesus Christ, which is a central tenet of the LDS Church. His speech appeared to have been overlooked for years, but on January 21", "id": "12068047" }, { "contents": "Mark E. Petersen\n\n\nMark Edward Petersen (November 7, 1900 – January 11, 1984) was an American news editor and religious leader who served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1944 until his death. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, he filled the vacancy in the Quorum caused by the excommunication of Richard R. Lyman. Petersen had become managing editor of the church-owned \"Deseret News\" in 1935 and editor in 1941.", "id": "2692480" }, { "contents": "Thomas C. Griggs\n\n\nthe LDS Church's Aaronic priesthood; his call to this office was given by Apostle George Q. Cannon. With the outbreak of the American Civil War, the Griggs heeded the counsel of LDS Church leaders to move to Utah Territory. The Griggs crossed the plains in Joseph Horne's Mormon pioneer company in 1861. Griggs first joined the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in 1866 when Charles John Thomas was the director. Griggs would continue as a member of the choir until his death in 1903. While Robert Sands was the conductor of the choir", "id": "9481149" }, { "contents": "Charles Clarence Neslen\n\n\nfrom Germany and he was imprisoned in Danzig. He served as president of the Königsberg District of the LDS Church for a part of his mission. Neslen was a member of the Democratic Party and a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1912. Neslen worked a total of 15 years for the \"Deseret News\". He was also a realtor and for a time served as secretary of the Salt Lake Real Estate Association. On October 26, 1905, Neslen married Grace T. Cannon, a daughter of George Q. Cannon.", "id": "21092533" }, { "contents": "Stephen L. Chipman\n\n\nStephen L. Chipman (1864–1945) was a member of the Utah State Legislature in 1903 and a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Utah County. He was also the first president of the Salt Lake Temple who was not also an apostle in the LDS Church. Chipman studied at Brigham Young Academy (the predecessor of Brigham Young University (BYU)) as a youth. From 1885 to 1887 he served as a Mormon missionary in the Southern States Mission of the LDS Church", "id": "15228384" }, { "contents": "Mountain Meadows massacre and Mormon public relations\n\n\nCannon, then president of the LDS California Mission. In the October 13, 1857 edition of Cannon's San Francisco newspaper \"The Western Standard\", Cannon responded to initial news reports of involvement by Mormons by charging the responsible journalists with writing \"reckless and malignant slanders\", despite knowing that the southern Utah Mormons were \"as innocent of [the massacre] as the child unborn\". The church's official newspaper in Salt Lake City, \"The Deseret News\", was initially slow to comment on the massacre,", "id": "22212632" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas the second-most senior apostle of the church after the death of Woodruff, Cannon did not become President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, as would be the practice in the LDS Church today. Rather, because Cannon was a member of the First Presidency, the church simply appointed the next senior apostle of the church—Brigham Young, Jr.—to be the quorum president. (Under today's practices, Cannon would have been appointed the president of the quorum and Young would have been appointed acting president.) Cannon", "id": "19825274" }, { "contents": "Clifford E. Young\n\n\nClifford Earle Young (December 7, 1883 – August 21, 1958) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1941 until his death. Young was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, the son of LDS Church leader Seymour B. Young. From 1905 to 1908, he served as a Mormon missionary in England and Germany. In 1928, Young became the president of the Alpine Stake of the LDS Church in Utah. In 1934, he joined the", "id": "8315768" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n33. Upon his joining the Quorum of the Twelve, Cannon was called to preside over the church's European Mission. Cannon's mission in Europe ended when he was recalled by Young in 1862 to work in Washington, D.C., to assist in the church's promotion of Utah Territory's bid for statehood. At the adjournment of the 1862 congressional session, Cannon again left for Europe to preside over the mission. In this capacity, Cannon was the editor of the \"Millennial Star\" and, for a short time,", "id": "19825271" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nfrom the federal authorities. In September 1888, Cannon surrendered himself and pleaded guilty at trial to charges of unlawful cohabitation under the Edmunds Act. As a result, Cannon served nearly six months in Utah's federal penitentiary. Cannon was pardoned in 1894 by U.S. President Grover Cleveland. Cannon died on April 12, 1901, in Monterey, California, at 74 years of age. Had he lived a few months longer, he would have become the President of the LDS Church: Lorenzo Snow died on October 10 of that year", "id": "19825280" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Isle of Man\n\n\nand Idaho which descends from the 19th century marriage of George Cannon and Ann Quayle before their emigration from Peel, Isle of Man. The family's most notable member was their oldest son George Quayle Cannon. The family is connected by marriage to the Bennion, Taylor, Wells and Young political families. LDS Membership statistics as of January 1, 2011 for the Isle of Man. The nation of the Isle of Man does not have its own mission. Instead it is served by an English mission. Five out of the six", "id": "7797107" }, { "contents": "The Contributor (LDS magazine)\n\n\nThe Contributor was an independent publication associated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) between 1879 and 1896. It was a monthly periodical and sought to represent the Young Men's and Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Associations (YMMIA and YLMIA respectively), the youth organizations of the LDS Church at the time. It was founded by Junius F. Wells, the inaugural head of the YMMIA. Abraham H. Cannon became editor when the magazine was purchased by the Cannon Publishing Company in 1892. With the", "id": "505110" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe official organ of the Sunday School until 1930, when it was replaced with \"The Instructor\". Cannon also served as the first general superintendent of the church's Sunday School from 1867 until his death. On April 8, 1873, Cannon became a member of the church's First Presidency when he was called as the first counselor by Brigham Young. Cannon went on to serve as counselor to three more presidents of the church: he was First Counselor to John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. Although Cannon", "id": "19825273" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\ntogether. Prior to her service in the general Primary presidency, Clara Cannon was a counselor in the presidencies of the Primary and Relief Society in the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. When Louie B. Felt became the first general presidency of the Primary, Matilda M. Barratt and Cannon were selected as Felt's counselors. Cannon was a counselor until 1895; the next year she was succeeded in the position by Josephine R. West. Clara Moses Cannon died of throat cancer in Centerville, Utah, aged 87 and was interred in", "id": "10663424" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nScouts of America and served in the organization's Great Salt Lake Council. Prior to his call as a general authority, Cannon served in the church as a bishop, stake president, patriarch, temple sealer, and regional representative. He was also the president of the church's Central British Mission from 1966 to 1969. From 1969 to 1972, Cannon was an assistant and counselor to W. Jay Eldredge, the general superintendent of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association. Cannon became a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy", "id": "8339580" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe Nauvoo Legion. During this time, Cannon served as printer of the \"Deseret News\" while it was publishing in exile in Fillmore, Utah. After the Utah War, he was called as president of the church's Eastern States Mission. The murder of Parley P. Pratt in 1857 created a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. That vacancy was not filled until Brigham Young called Cannon to the apostleship three years later. Cannon was ordained to the priesthood office of apostle on August 26, 1860, at age", "id": "19825270" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nin the Sandwich Islands (later known as the Kingdom of Hawaii), where he served for four years. While in the islands, Cannon converted many Native Hawaiians. One of the most notable was Jonatana Napela, who assisted Cannon in translating the Book of Mormon into Hawaiian. Joseph F. Smith, a future church president, would follow Cannon and serve in Hawaii one year later. Returning to Utah Territory, Cannon married Elizabeth Hoagland (daughter of Abraham Hoagland and his wife.) He was almost immediately called to assist apostle", "id": "19825268" }, { "contents": "Ronald E. Poelman\n\n\nRonald Eugene Poelman (May 10, 1928 – November 19, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 until his death. In 1984, he delivered a controversial sermon in the LDS Church's general conference which the church redacted before publishing. Poelman was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to a Latter-day Saint family. As a young man, he served as a Mormon missionary in the LDS Church's Netherlands Mission. He began his", "id": "4765396" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\n. He would marry Martha Brown of Ogden in 1878. In 1891 he helped to organize the Utah Republican Party. After a failed bid to become delegate from the Utah Territory, he succeeded and served from March 4, 1895, to January 4, 1896. Cannon was chosen in 1896 to serve as senator by the Utah Legislature in spite of LDS church leadership favoring his father for the job. He served in the United States Senate, initially, as a member of the Republican Party; however, he later became a", "id": "11000346" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nmember of the Silver Republican Party, founded by his successor (and future employer at \"The Salt Lake Tribune\") Thomas Kearns. Cannon lost re-election in 1899. Utah's state legislators indicated they would not support Cannon for re-election shortly after the November 1898 elections. Cannon had voted against the Dingley Act, which would have raised tariffs on sugar and helped the Utah sugar industry. It was strongly supported by the LDS Church hierarchy, who now opposed his re-election. Other factors were his support", "id": "11000347" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand Ghana. The first convert baptized in Africa was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and his wife were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' centre in Nauvoo, Illinois. For three months in 1989, Cannon was the interim president of the LDS Church's Germany Hamburg Mission; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. After his interim service as mission president, Cannon was the second president of the Frankfurt Germany Temple from 1989 to", "id": "9582827" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nCounselor to William B. Preston, the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church; he served in this position between 1884 and 1886. In 1884, shortly after Cannon had become a general authority, a sensationalized news story by Joseph Lippman in the \"Salt Lake Tribune\" alleged that Cannon had taken his wife's sister Louie Wells as a plural wife. Lippman suggested that Cannon and Wells had been married in the Logan Temple. In fact, there had been no such marriage, though it was later revealed that Cannon and Wells had", "id": "7202724" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nbranches of the LDS Church in Nigeria and Ghana. The first convert baptized in Nigeria was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and her husband were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' center in Nauvoo, Illinois. In 1989, they served as interim leaders of the Germany Hamburg Mission of the church; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. From 1989 to 1992, Cannon was the matron of the Frankfurt Germany Temple while her husband", "id": "9582966" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\n's Quorum of the Twelve. Abraham was a son of George Q. Cannon, an early member of the church's First Presidency. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary in the church's Central States Mission. After his mission, he served in the United States Air Force during the Second World War. In 1946, he began attending Brigham Young University (BYU). After graduating from BYU, Cannon became a vice president of Beneficial Life Insurance Company in Salt Lake City. He was active in the Boy", "id": "8339579" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\n1925, Cannon became the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church, succeeding Charles W. Nibley. Cannon's counselors were David A. Smith and John Wells. In 1938, Cannon was released as Presiding Bishop and was succeeded by LeGrand Richards. At the same time, Cannon was ordained an apostle and made an \"associate\" of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, a unique position that had never been filled before. When Quorum member Melvin J. Ballard died the next year, Cannon became a full member of the Quorum; he served", "id": "2194374" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\nClarissa Cordelia (\"Clara\") Moses Cannon (April 21, 1839 – August 21, 1926) was a Mormon pioneer and a member of the first-ever general presidency of the Primary organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). She was the second counselor to general president Louie B. Felt from 1880 to 1895. Clara Moses was born in Westfield, Massachusetts. In 1846 she took the six-month journey on the ship \"Brooklyn\" from New York City to San", "id": "10663422" }, { "contents": "Leonora Cannon Taylor\n\n\nLeonora Cannon Taylor (October 6, 1796–December 9, 1868) was a member of the Relief Society organization at the time of its origin and the first wife of John Taylor, the third president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). On October 6, 1796 in Peel, Isle of Man, Leonora Cannon was born to George Cannon and Leonora Callister. As the oldest daughter in the family, when Leonora's father died when she was thirteen she went away to London to work", "id": "16190675" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\ntheir books, which were then distributed by others. However, Cannon & Sons distributed several important books through their stores and mail order (see table). The company had extensive ties to the LDS Church-owned newspaper, the \"Deseret News.\" Five of Cannon's sons held important positions in the paper, and Cannon himself was editor between 1867 and 1872, and again while temporarily owning the paper from 1892 to 1898. Nearly every George Q. Cannon & Sons book was printed on the \"Deseret News\" press", "id": "18344086" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nof the Utah Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Cannon was the oldest son of George Q. Cannon and the one most expected to follow in his prominent father's footsteps in politics, church office, and journalism. Heber J. Grant once said of Cannon: \"There probably is not a young man in the church who had had more opportunities and advantages extended to him educationally, spiritually, and every other way than John Q. Cannon.\" At the age of 27, Cannon was called to serve as the Second", "id": "7202723" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nMartha Maria \"Mattie\" Hughes Cannon (July 1, 1857 – July 10, 1932) was a Welsh-born immigrant to the United States, a polygamous wife, physician, Utah women's rights advocate and suffragist, and Utah State Senator. Her family immigrated to the United States as converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and traveled West to settle in Utah territory with other Mormons. She started working at the age of fourteen. At sixteen she enrolled in the University", "id": "15993465" }, { "contents": "Church Office Building\n\n\nThe Church Office Building is a 28-story building in Salt Lake City, Utah, which houses the administrative support staff for the lay ministry of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) throughout the world. The building is 420 ft (128 m) tall at roof level and is located within the Temple Square complex on the corner of North Temple and State Street. The building was designed by George Cannon Young at a cost of US$31 million to build. Construction took place from 1962 to 1972", "id": "13754819" }, { "contents": "John Lyman Smith\n\n\nJohn Lyman Smith (November 17, 1828 – February 21, 1898) was an American politician and Mormon missionary. He served as a member of the Utah Territory's Legislative Assembly's House of Representatives for Iron County, Utah, from 1852 to 1853, and the Great Salt Lake County, Utah, from 1853 to 1855. Cousin of the founder of the Latter Day Saint Movement, Joseph Smith, Smith was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) who traveled to the", "id": "18219861" }, { "contents": "Francis M. Lyman\n\n\nFrancis Marion Lyman (January 12, 1840 – November 18, 1916) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was the President of the Quorum from 1903 until his death. Lyman's father and son were also apostles in the church: his father was Amasa M. Lyman and his son was Richard R. Lyman. Both his father and son were excommunicated from the church while serving as apostles. Francis M. Lyman was born as", "id": "20761093" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nAngus Munn Cannon (May 17, 1834 – June 7, 1915) was an early Latter Day Saint leader and Mormon pioneer. Cannon was born in Liverpool, Lancashire, England. His Manx parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 1840, being baptized by his uncle John Taylor. In 1842, the Cannon family went to Nauvoo, Illinois, United States. By 1849, they were in Utah Territory. Cannon was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon and their lives followed very similar paths up", "id": "7202650" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\naffairs while Taylor recovered. This training would serve him well in later life. Cannon's father died in 1845. In 1846, Taylor traveled to England to organize the affairs of the church after Smith's death. Meanwhile, Cannon accompanied Taylor's wife and family as they moved to Winter Quarters, Nebraska. When Taylor returned, Cannon traveled with the entire Taylor family to the Salt Lake Valley, arriving in October 1847. In 1849, Cannon was asked by church president Brigham Young to serve as a missionary for the church", "id": "19825267" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nstaying in the position until December 31, 1903. Cannon attempted to prohibit children not vaccinated from attending school in case of a disease outbreak. The Board of Health sent out vaccines; however, the \"Deseret News\" spread information that vaccines weren't safe. LDS Church leaders were divided on the subject. One apostle, Brigham Young Jr. was very vocal in his opinions, writing in the \"Deseret News\" about the evils of vaccinations. The influence of the \"Deseret News\" and Mormon religious leaders limited how many", "id": "15993490" }, { "contents": "Billy Johnson (Mormon)\n\n\nLDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball announced Official Declaration 2 which extended the priesthood to all worthy male members of the church regardless of race or color. In gratitude, Johnson sent a letter to Kimball, explaining that God had prepared the people in Ghana, asking him to send missionaries to the members. Kimball responded to his pleas and sent the first called missionaries Rendell N. Mabey and Rachel Mabey. They joined Edwin Q. Cannon and Janath R. Cannon. Johnson was finally baptized into the LDS Church on December 9, 1978. He", "id": "4108521" }, { "contents": "Juvenile Instructor\n\n\ncatechisms on the Bible, Book of Mormon, and Doctrine and Covenants; musical compositions; illustrations; stories; editorial teachings; and other aids to gospel instruction. It was the first magazine for children published in the United States west of the Mississippi River. For much of its history, \"The Juvenile Instructor\" was owned by the Cannon family. Its first editor was George Q. Cannon, an apostle in the LDS Church. Cannon and his family continued to publish the magazine privately until January 1, 1901, when the", "id": "9210614" }, { "contents": "Joseph F. Smith\n\n\nand as second counselor to Lorenzo Snow (1898–1901). Smith was appointed first counselor to Snow on the death of first counselor George Q. Cannon, but, as Snow himself died only four days later, Smith never served in that position. He succeeded Snow as president of the LDS Church and president of the Salt Lake Temple. He served as president of the temple until 1911, when he transferred the responsibility to Anthon H. Lund. Smith also served as editor of the \"Improvement Era\" and \"Juvenile Instructor\",", "id": "4117444" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in California\n\n\nQ. Cannon began publication in San Francisco of the \"Western Standard\", a weekly periodical supportive of the Church. The first colonization from Utah to California came in 1851 when a company of about 450 saints and slaves under direction of Elders Amasa M. Lyman and Charles C. Rich of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles settled at what is now San Bernardino. The colony was the final settlement in a string of Mormon communities extending from Salt Lake City in an area known as Deseret. The community thrived, and on July 6,", "id": "22187256" }, { "contents": "Sunday School (LDS Church)\n\n\nout. On November 11, 1867, Young and church leaders Daniel H. Wells, George A. Smith, Wilford Woodruff, George Q. Cannon, and Brigham Young, Jr. met and organized the Parent Sunday School Union. Young appointed Cannon as the first general superintendent of the Sunday School, a position he would hold until his death in 1901. In 1872, the Sunday School organization was renamed the Deseret Sunday School Union. The organized Sunday School addressed lesson topics and source materials, grading, prizes and rewards, use of hymns", "id": "8671425" }, { "contents": "Hugh W. Pinnock\n\n\nHugh Wallace Pinnock (January 15, 1934 – December 16, 2000) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Pinnock was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Western States Mission. Pinnock graduated from University of Utah in 1958, where he became a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity and Owl and Key. Prior to his call to the First", "id": "8519001" }, { "contents": "Charles W. Penrose\n\n\nwas organized Penrose was called as a member of the high council. In 1877, Penrose became the assistant editor of the LDS Church-owned \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, working under George Q. Cannon. Penrose was known for his writing, including missionary tracts and lyrics of Latter-day Saint hymns, including \"God of Our Fathers\", \"O Ye Mountains High\", and \"Up, Awake, Ye Defenders of Zion\". In 1880, Penrose became the editor-in-chief of", "id": "2194239" }, { "contents": "Rulon S. Wells\n\n\nRulon Seymour Wells (July 7, 1854 – May 7, 1941) was a Utah politician and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1893 until his death. Wells was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to LDS Church leader Daniel H. Wells (1814–1891) and Louisa Free (1824–1886). In 1875, Wells travelled to Europe as a Mormon missionary and worked primarily in Germany and Switzerland. He returned to the United States in 1877. On", "id": "8315459" }, { "contents": "G. Homer Durham\n\n\nGeorge Homer Durham (February 4, 1911 – January 10, 1985) was an American academic administrator and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Durham was born in Parowan, Utah, and was raised in Salt Lake City. As a boy in grade school, he met and became lifelong friends with future LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley. As a young man, Durham served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the British", "id": "21588256" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nJonatana Napela or Jonathan Hawaii Napela (first name also spelled Iohatana, full name Napelakapuonamahanaonaleleonalani) (September 11, 1813 – August 6, 1879) was one of the earliest Hawaiian converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Hawaii, joining in the 1830s. He helped translate the Book of Mormon into the Hawaiian language, as \"Ka Buke a Moramona,\" working with missionary George Q. Cannon. Napela was appointed to serve as a superintendent of the colony at Kalaupapa, Molokai", "id": "16647246" }, { "contents": "Richfield, Utah\n\n\nserves about 600 students per year. As in most settled areas of rural Utah, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) plays a prominent role. The Mormons were highly industrious colonizers. From 1847, when they founded Salt Lake City, until 1877, they founded 360 towns. Following direction from Brigham Young, Latter-day Saints founded the town and outlying hamlets about 150 years ago. Members of the LDS Church are predominant among the residents. Even in this heart of Mormon country,", "id": "11082836" }, { "contents": "Marvin O. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Owen Ashton (April 8, 1883 – October 7, 1946) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1938 until his death. Prior to becoming a general authority, Ashton was a prominent local leader of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City, Utah. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Mormon parents. He married Rachel Grace Jeremy in 1906 and in 1907 went to England as a missionary for the LDS Church. He returned", "id": "14505232" }, { "contents": "LeGrand Richards\n\n\nLeGrand Richards (February 6, 1886 – January 11, 1983) was a prominent missionary and leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He served as the seventh presiding bishop of the LDS Church from 1938 to 1952, and was then called as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles by church president David O. McKay. Richards served in the Quorum of the Twelve until his death in Salt Lake City, Utah, at the age of 96. Richards was born in", "id": "2294374" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nwas educated at Lahainaluna School. Napela was trained as a lawyer. He was serving as a judge in Wailuku, Hawaii, when he met American George Q. Cannon, a member of the LDS Church on a missionary trip to Hawaii. After Napela's conversion in the 1830s to the LDS Church, the government forced the judge to resign from his position. The LDS Church was regarded with suspicion. LDS Church historian Andrew Jensen said that Napela \"did splendid missionary work for the Church.\" Napela was sent on a specific", "id": "16647248" }, { "contents": "Gardo House\n\n\ncounselor George Q. Cannon and other church leaders suggested that Taylor occupy the Gardo House after its completion, but he repeatedly refused. However, when church members unanimously voted on April 9, 1879, to make the Gardo House the official parsonage for LDS Church presidents, Taylor reluctantly accepted their decision. Moses Thatcher, William Jennings, and Angus M. Cannon were appointed as a committee to oversee completion of the mansion. On December 27, 1881, the Deseret News published a letter from John Taylor announcing a public reception and tour of", "id": "1496184" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nStates Mission of the church in 1901. In 1902, Grant married George J. Cannon. In 1923, Cannon was asked to succeed Mae Taylor Nystrom as the second counselor to Martha Horne Tingey, the general president of what was then called the Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Association. In 1929, when Ruth May Fox succeeded Tingey, Cannon was asked to be her first counselor. Cannon served in this capacity until 1929, when Fox was released and Cannon was selected by her father, who was President of the Church, to", "id": "1681854" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\n. (At the time, Cannon was a counselor to James E. Faust in the church's International Mission, which had jurisdiction over all areas of the world not otherwise part of a mission.) After Bateman and Cannon reported the results of their trip, Cannon and his wife were called and set apart as the first Mormon missionaries to black Africa. They—along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey—preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 35 branches and 5 districts of the LDS Church in Nigeria", "id": "9582826" }, { "contents": "Marion D. Hanks\n\n\nMarion Duff Hanks (October 13, 1921 – August 5, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1953 until his death. Hanks was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man he served in the Northern States Mission of the LDS Church, which was headquartered in Chicago. He was in the United States Navy during World War II and received a J.D. from the University of Utah. Prior to his call as a general authority", "id": "6558935" }, { "contents": "Lillie T. Freeze\n\n\nthe Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association (YLMIA). In this capacity, she was invited to speak at the Salt Lake Tabernacle on April 6, 1880, at a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the LDS Church's founding. In 1880, Lillie Freeze was one of the founding members of the LDS Church's Primary Association. Freeze was appointed as the first secretary of the general presidency, which was composed of Louie B. Felt, Matilda M. Barratt, and Clara C. M. Cannon. Freeze was secretary until 1888, when", "id": "10906695" }, { "contents": "Henry D. Taylor\n\n\nHenry Dixon Taylor (November 22, 1903 – February 24, 1987) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1958 until his death. Taylor was born in Provo, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Eastern States Mission. During his mission, Taylor was the president of the church's Connecticut District. Taylor received a bachelor's degree from Brigham Young University (BYU) and a master's degree", "id": "2477100" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas elected to be the non-voting delegate for Utah Territory in the United States Congress in 1872. He remained a congressional delegate until 1882, when his seat was declared vacant by the enactment of the Edmunds Act, which terminated many political and civil rights for Utah's Mormon polygamists. By 1880, Cannon had served four terms in Congress as Territorial Delegate. The newly appointed anti-Mormon territorial governor, Eli Houston Murray, openly supported the Liberal Party, which generally opposed church candidates. The 1880 territory-wide election", "id": "19825275" }, { "contents": "George F. Richards\n\n\nGeorge Franklin Richards (February 23, 1861 – August 8, 1950) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from April 9, 1906 until his death. He also served as Acting Presiding Patriarch of the LDS Church from 1937 to 1942 and President of the Quorum of the Twelve from May 25, 1945 until his death. Richards was born in Farmington, Utah Territory, the son of Franklin D. Richards and Nanny Longstroth. Richards", "id": "2194252" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\n1882, at the age of 23, Cannon assumed business control of the \"Juvenile Instructor\" and associated publications. He continued his management until his death. In October 1892, Cannon and his brother John Q. Cannon took control of the \"Deseret News\" publishing. He also became the editor and publisher of \"The Contributor\". On October 9, 1882, Cannon became a member of the First Seven Presidents of the Seventy of the church. On October 7, 1889, church president Wilford Woodruff named Cannon a member", "id": "9035316" }, { "contents": "Howard Cannon\n\n\nHis grandfather David Cannon, was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon, and a leading figure in the building of the St. George Temple, who was later the third president of that temple. His father Walter Cannon was one of David Cannon's 31 children. Howard's parents had married in 1909, his mother was Leah Sullivan. When Cannon was two years old his father left for England to served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for two years. Cannon went to Woodward School in", "id": "18060013" }, { "contents": "Mormon fiction\n\n\nMormons were generally non-fiction, including scripture, missionary tracts, and doctrinal literature. In 1844, Parley P. Pratt published what is commonly cited as the first work of LDS fiction, the didactic \"Dialogue between Joseph Smith and the Devil\". It was first published in the New York Herald. Early Mormon leaders like Brigham Young and George Q. Cannon condemned novels for wasting time, a rhetoric that persisted until the 1880s. Fiction among LDS Church members developed once the Mormons had settled in Utah and developed a degree of", "id": "453087" }, { "contents": "Marvin J. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Jeremy Ashton (May 6, 1915 – February 25, 1994) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1971 until his death. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was the son of Marvin O. Ashton, a local LDS leader, who later became a church general authority. The younger Ashton worked in the lumber business as a youth. He graduated from the University of Utah. He served a", "id": "19825413" }, { "contents": "Rudger Clawson\n\n\nRudger Judd Clawson (March 12, 1857 – June 21, 1943) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1898 until his death in 1943. He also served as President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1921 until his death and as a member of the First Presidency of the LDS Church for five days in 1901. Clawson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to Hiram Bradley Clawson and Margaret Judd", "id": "9035430" }, { "contents": "Utah-Idaho Sugar Company\n\n\npayment and a $130,000 loan. Cutler also went to Chicago and New York City to secure loans from banks; he came back, via train, with a bag full of money, as he did not think any banks in Utah could have cashed the large bank draft. The LDS church made more payments and secured more loans. In addition, George Q. Cannon and Heber J. Grant personally funded the enterprise. Joseph F. Smith, president of the LDS Church, gave a sermon in 1893 explaining that this was done to", "id": "1319991" }, { "contents": "President of the Church (LDS Church)\n\n\nthe President of the Quorum. When Woodruff died, his counselors returned to the Quorum based on the date they were ordained an apostle, placing George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith below Brigham Young Jr. and John Willard Young. Heber J. Grant objected to that arguing that seniority should be based on ordination to the Quorum rather than ordination as an apostle. Young argued that an apostle should not be demoted as long as he is worthy of the position. On March 31, 1900, Snow met with his counselors, Cannon and", "id": "16343191" }, { "contents": "Alfred W. McCune\n\n\n. Judge Orlando Powers, Associate Justice of the Utah Supreme Court, said in 1906 that he understood that McCune was not a Mormon. Frank J. Cannon, too, claimed McCune was not a Mormon, and B. H. Roberts, LDS Church historian and member of the First Council of the Seventy, said in 1930 that McCune was not a church member. Historian Orvin Malmquist, however, says that church records show he was baptized into the LDS Church at the age of eight in 1857, and that his marriage to Elizabeth", "id": "15062757" } ]
Joseph Jenne Cannon ( May 22 , 1877 -- November 5 , 1945 ) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ( LDS Church ) . He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family . As a young man , Cannon served as a for the LDS Church in Europe . He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903 . Lyman and Cannon also similarly dedicated Finland in 1903 . In the 1908 election , Cannon was elected as a member of the [START_ENT] Utah House of Representatives [END_ENT] from . He served one term , from 1909 to 1911 . Cannon was not formally associated with any political party . From 1931 to 1934 , Cannon was the editor of the Deseret News , a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church . His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church 's British Mission . Cannon served in this capacity for three years , until 1937 . Immediately following his return to Utah , Cannon was asked to become the first assistant to George Q. Morris , the general superintendent of the church 's . Cannon served in this capacity until his death from pancreatic cancer
897b3bad-55dd-437d-9e25-56abc422c839_Joseph_J._Canno:10
[{"answer": "Utah House of Representatives", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "7123926", "title": "Utah House of Representatives"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nJoseph Jenne Cannon (May 22, 1877 – November 5, 1945) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Europe. He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in St. Petersburg and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903. Lyman and Cannon", "id": "13710370" }, { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nalso similarly dedicated Finland in 1903. In the 1908 election, Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. He served one term, from 1909 to 1911. Cannon was not formally associated with any political party. From 1931 to 1934, Cannon was the editor of the \"Deseret News\", a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church. His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church's British Mission. Cannon served in this", "id": "13710371" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nSylvester Quayle Cannon (June 10, 1877 – May 29, 1943) was an American businessman, engineer, and religious leader who served as the sixth presiding bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1925 to 1938 and a member of church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1939 until his death. He was the son of George Q. Cannon, an apostle and member of the church's First Presidency. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. He studied", "id": "2194372" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nJohn Quayle Cannon (April 19, 1857 – January 14, 1931) was an editor-in-chief of the \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, Utah, and a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He also served as a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army during the Spanish–American War. He was the son of LDS Church apostle George Q. Cannon and Elizabeth Hoagland. He was married to Elizabeth \"Annie\" Wells Cannon. Cannon", "id": "7202721" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nFrank Jenne Cannon (January 25, 1859July 25, 1933) was the first United States Senator from Utah, who served from 1896 to 1899. Born in Salt Lake City, he was the eldest child of Sarah Jenne Cannon and George Q. Cannon. His father was an Apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and later was a member of its First Presidency. After attending the school in Salt Lake City, he studied at University of Deseret, graduating at the age of 19", "id": "11000345" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nEdwin Quayle \"Ted\" Cannon, Jr. (May 6, 1918 – April 6, 2005) was a Utah politician and businessman and was a prominent leader and missionary in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was among the first missionaries in the LDS Church to preach to black people in Africa and was part of the first group missionaries sent to establish official congregations of the LDS Church in West Africa. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Edwin Q. Cannon,", "id": "9582822" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Ivins Cannon (March 9, 1920 – August 4, 2009) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1986 to 1991. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, Cannon was the son of George J. Cannon and Lucy Grant Cannon, a leader of the youth in the LDS Church. His maternal grandfather was Heber J. Grant, the seventh president of the LDS Church. His paternal grandfather was Abraham H. Cannon, who was a member of the church", "id": "8339578" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nLucy Grant Cannon (October 22, 1880 – May 7, 1966) was the fourth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1937 to 1948. She was a member of the general presidency of the Young Women from 1923 to 1948, serving as a counselor to two presidents. Lucy Grant was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Lucy Stringham and LDS Church apostle Heber J. Grant. She served as a church missionary in the Western", "id": "1681853" }, { "contents": "George Mousley Cannon\n\n\nTrust Company. He served as a delegate to the 1895 Utah State Constitutional Convention and chaired the committee which formulated the articles on taxation and public debt. In 1896, Cannon was elected to the Utah State Senate and served as its first president. When The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) modified stake boundaries in 1900, dividing the new Granite Stake off from the Salt Lake Stake, Cannon became the Sunday School Superintendent of the new stake. From 1901 until after 1930, Cannon served as", "id": "8629874" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nat the University of Utah and then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received a B.S. degree in mining engineering. In 1899, Cannon began an LDS Church mission in Belgium. Cannon then served from 1900 to 1902 as president of the church's Netherlands–Belgium Mission. Cannon also served as Francis M. Lyman's secretary on a three-month trip to many nations along the Mediterranean and in the Middle East. From 1916 to 1925, Cannon served as president of the Pioneer Stake in Salt Lake City. In", "id": "2194373" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\nAbraham Hoagland Cannon (also reported as Abram H. Cannon) (March 12, 1859 – July 19, 1896) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. His parents were George Q. Cannon, a Latter Day Saints apostle, and Elizabeth Hoagland, daughter of Abraham Hoagland. Cannon studied at Deseret University. Later, he studied architecture under Obed Taylor. Cannon married Sarah A.", "id": "9035314" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nSr. and Luella Wareing. He was born at his parents' home because of the 1918 influenza pandemic. Cannon's paternal grandfather was George Q. Cannon, a Mormon pioneer and prominent leader in the LDS Church. Cannon was raised in Salt Lake City. In 1937, Cannon went on a mission for the LDS Church to Nazi Germany. He was president of a branch of the church in Berlin in 1939 when the LDS Church evacuated its missionaries from Europe at the beginning of World War II. Cannon finished his mission in", "id": "9582823" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\n. Callville was submerged when Lake Mead was filled. In 1869 and 1870, Cannon served a second mission in the Eastern United States. In April 1876, Cannon became president of the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. He served in this position until April 1, 1904. After his time as stake president, Cannon served as a patriarch in the church. Cannon was the mayor of St. George, Utah Territory in 1861 and 1862. In 1896, after Utah had become a U.S. state, he stood for election", "id": "7202652" }, { "contents": "Donald Q. Cannon\n\n\nDonald Quayle Cannon (born 1936) is a retired professor at Brigham Young University who specializes in Mormon history, particularly early Mormon history and international Mormon history. As a young man, Cannon was a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Germany. Cannon earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Utah. Cannon holds a Ph.D. from Clark University. In the late 1960s, he taught at the University of Southern Maine. In the LDS Church he has", "id": "10057919" }, { "contents": "George Goddard (Mormon)\n\n\nwas the clerk to LDS Church presiding bishop Edward Hunter. From 1874 to 1884, Goddard was the clerk of the LDS Church's biannual general conferences. In 1872, Goddard became the inaugural first assistant to George Q. Cannon, the first superintendent of the Deseret Sunday School Union. Goddard served in this capacity for 26 years, until his death in 1899. Goddard was also a member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and a patriarch in the church. He died in Salt Lake City and was buried at Salt Lake City Cemetery.", "id": "7701639" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nuntil their arrival in Utah. In 1854, Cannon went on a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to the Eastern United States, where he assisted John Taylor in publishing a periodical entitled \"The Mormon\". He also preached and baptized in Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware. Cannon returned to Utah Territory due to the troubles connected with the Utah War. In 1864, Cannon helped establish Call's Landing on the Colorado River, later known as Callville, Nevada", "id": "7202651" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nJanath Russell Cannon (October 28, 1918 – July 5, 2007) was a counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was also a prominent missionary in the church and was among the first to preach to black people in Africa. Born in Ogden, Utah, Janath Russell was educated at Wellesley College. In 1941, she married Edwin Q. Cannon in the Salt Lake Temple. From 1971 to 1974,", "id": "9582964" }, { "contents": "Joseph A. Cannon\n\n\nserved as an assistant administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from 1983 to 1985. Joseph A. Cannon was born on July 31, 1949. Cannon served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Ireland, including on the Isle of Man, the ancestral homeland of the Cannons. Cannon received a degree in political science and, in 1977, a law degree from Brigham Young University. Cannon served as a law clerk in Salt Lake City for U.S. District", "id": "7202830" }, { "contents": "Elaine A. Cannon\n\n\nElaine Anderson Cannon (April 9, 1922 – May 19, 2003) was the eighth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 to 1984. Cannon has been a writer and an editor and is the author of over 50 books. Elaine Anderson was born to Aldon Joseph and Minnie Egan Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a teenager, she started writing a daily column aimed at teenagers for the \"Deseret News\". She", "id": "1682052" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nAdele Morris Cannon Howells (January 11, 1886 – April 14, 1951) was the fourth general president of the Primary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1943 until her death of rheumatic heart disease. She contributed to \"The Children's Friend\" magazine, as well as the fundraising for the Children's Primary Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. Adele Morris Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to George Mousley Cannon and Marian Adelaide Morris. She", "id": "1336419" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\nGeorgius Young Cannon (March 6, 1892 – March 29, 1987) was a 20th-century architect in the American West who operated principally out of Salt Lake City, Utah. Cannon trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), graduating in 1918. He then joined the army and later returned to Utah to intern with the architectural firm Ware & Treganza and Cannon & Fetzer. He served two missions to Germany for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). For a time", "id": "12786285" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Quayle Cannon (January 11, 1827 – April 12, 1901) was an early member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), and served in the First Presidency under four successive presidents of the church: Brigham Young, John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. He was the church's chief political strategist, and was dubbed \"the Mormon premier\" and \"the Mormon Richelieu\" by the press. He was also a five", "id": "19825263" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nwas the oldest of nine children, and her father George Cannon was the first president of the Utah State Senate. As a child, Cannon suffered from rheumatic fever. She enjoyed reading in her spare time and horseback riding. She was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Cannon attended schools in Salt Lake City and graduated from the LDS High School and Business College in 1903. She attended the University of Utah and studied physical education and graduated with her bachelor's degree in 1909. Cannon", "id": "1336420" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nis one of the few general authorities of the LDS Church to have been excommunicated. From 1889 until 1892, Cannon was the editor of the \"Ogden Standard\". From October 1892 until April 1898, he was the editor in chief of the \"Deseret News\". After the Spanish–American War he returned to work at the \"Deseret News\" and served as an executive editor of the newspaper off-and-on until his death. He was much beloved by his co-workers. Cannon was a member", "id": "7202722" }, { "contents": "Tracy Y. Cannon\n\n\nLatter-day Saints. In 1939, he was made second assistant to Melvin J. Ballard, supervisor of the committee. From 1915 to 1927, Cannon was a member of the high council of the Pioneer Stake of the LDS Church. In 1917, he became a member of the Deseret Sunday School Union General Board. From 1930 through 1936, Cannon was bishop of the Cannon Ward in Salt Lake City. Cannon was an editor of the 1927 LDS Church hymnal. In 1925, Cannon was appointed director of the McCune School", "id": "12019030" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe church's Welsh-language periodical, \"Udgorn Seion\". From 1867 to 1874, Cannon was the managing editor of the \"Deseret News\". It was under his direction that the newspaper was first published on a daily basis. In 1866, Cannon began publication of a magazine for youth and young adult Latter-day Saints called \"The Juvenile Instructor\". He owned and published this magazine until his death; in 1901 his family sold the magazine to the LDS Church's Sunday School organization. The periodical was", "id": "19825272" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nCannon and her husband were heads of the Switzerland Mission of the LDS Church. Upon their return to Utah in 1974, Cannon became the first counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the church's Relief Society. Cannon served in this capacity until 1978, when she was released so that she and her husband could become the first missionaries of the church to preach in \"black Africa\". They — along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey — preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 27", "id": "9582965" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\nan LDS Church organization responsible for educating young members of the LDS church, and the magazine was the first church periodical oriented toward youth. Cannon opened the George Q. Cannon & Sons bookstore in 1867 to sell the magazine and other publications of an uplifting nature. Cannon believed that secular novels did not reflect Latter-day Saint values. In the 1880s, Cannon expanded with a branch in Ogden, Utah. It is not known how many books Cannon & Sons actually published itself. In this era, authors commonly self-published", "id": "18344085" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n. Cannon was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. Cannon fathered 32 children, some of whom are Abraham H. Cannon, John Q. Cannon, and Sylvester Q. Cannon, who all became general authorities of the LDS Church; Frank J. Cannon, Utah's first U.S. Senator; and Lewis T. Cannon and Georgius Y. Cannon, prominent architects in Utah. Some of Cannon's prominent descendants include Howard Cannon, U.S. Senator from Nevada from 1959 to 1983 and Chris Cannon, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1997 to", "id": "19825281" }, { "contents": "Salt Lake City Council Hall\n\n\nwho was then the official architect for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Built at First South and 120 East (more on Salt Lake City's coordinate system), sandstone for the structure was delivered from Red Butte Canyon on Utah's first chartered railroad. The well-furnished Greek revival building was completed at a cost of $70,000. In January 1866, City Hall was dedicated by George Q. Cannon, a prominent LDS leader. Many other LDS leaders attended the dedication including Brigham", "id": "19382830" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\n, Cannon moved to Los Angeles and worked as the office manager of his MIT schoolmate Wallace Neff. He later returned to Utah and designed numerous buildings, mostly residences, and some of which remain on the National Register of Historic Places. Among his works were meetinghouses of the LDS Church and other civic buildings. Cannon served on a church-appointed board of six architects that oversaw the construction of the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple. Cannon was the youngest of 32 children born to LDS Church leader George Q. Cannon. His mother,", "id": "12786286" }, { "contents": "Karl G. Maeser\n\n\nin the General Superintendency of the Deseret Sunday School Union. He was the Second Assistant to General Superintendent George Q. Cannon from July 1894 to January 1899. He then served as the First Assistant to Cannon from January 1899 until February 1901. Maeser also participated in the Utah constitutional convention after Abraham Smoot's death in 1895. He proposed an article to support prohibition, but later backed down. Missionaries from the LDS Church were removed from California in 1858 due to the Utah War. Missionary work resumed in 1892. Maeser presided over", "id": "11030473" }, { "contents": "Frank B. Woodbury\n\n\nFrank Bartlett Woodbury (December 27, 1867 – December 21, 1962) was a leader of and an Acting Presiding Patriarch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), one of only three church members to hold this position in church history. Born in St. George, Utah Territory, to Orin Nelson Woodbury and Ann Cannon, Woodbury served in many capacities in the church on a local level. Some, but not all, LDS Church sources list Woodbury as \"Acting Presiding Patriarch\" of", "id": "8238754" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand 1958 and served three full terms. From 1964 to 1971, Cannon was a bishop of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. From 1971 to 1974, he was the president of the Switzerland Mission of the church. In 1978, three weeks after the LDS Church announced that it would no longer impose restrictions of black people receiving the priesthood or participating in temple ordinances, Cannon traveled to Africa on behalf of the church with Merrill J. Bateman to assess the prospects for church missionary work and growth in \"black Africa\"", "id": "9582825" }, { "contents": "Amasa Lyman\n\n\n). Lyman served as the first mayor of San Bernardino. In 1860, Young appointed three of the twelve apostles—Lyman, Charles C. Rich, and George Q. Cannon—to the presidency of the church's European Mission. On March 16, 1862, Lyman preached a sermon in Dundee, Scotland, which all but denied the reality of and the necessity for the atonement of Jesus Christ, which is a central tenet of the LDS Church. His speech appeared to have been overlooked for years, but on January 21", "id": "12068047" }, { "contents": "Mark E. Petersen\n\n\nMark Edward Petersen (November 7, 1900 – January 11, 1984) was an American news editor and religious leader who served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1944 until his death. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, he filled the vacancy in the Quorum caused by the excommunication of Richard R. Lyman. Petersen had become managing editor of the church-owned \"Deseret News\" in 1935 and editor in 1941.", "id": "2692480" }, { "contents": "Thomas C. Griggs\n\n\nthe LDS Church's Aaronic priesthood; his call to this office was given by Apostle George Q. Cannon. With the outbreak of the American Civil War, the Griggs heeded the counsel of LDS Church leaders to move to Utah Territory. The Griggs crossed the plains in Joseph Horne's Mormon pioneer company in 1861. Griggs first joined the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in 1866 when Charles John Thomas was the director. Griggs would continue as a member of the choir until his death in 1903. While Robert Sands was the conductor of the choir", "id": "9481149" }, { "contents": "Charles Clarence Neslen\n\n\nfrom Germany and he was imprisoned in Danzig. He served as president of the Königsberg District of the LDS Church for a part of his mission. Neslen was a member of the Democratic Party and a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1912. Neslen worked a total of 15 years for the \"Deseret News\". He was also a realtor and for a time served as secretary of the Salt Lake Real Estate Association. On October 26, 1905, Neslen married Grace T. Cannon, a daughter of George Q. Cannon.", "id": "21092533" }, { "contents": "Stephen L. Chipman\n\n\nStephen L. Chipman (1864–1945) was a member of the Utah State Legislature in 1903 and a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Utah County. He was also the first president of the Salt Lake Temple who was not also an apostle in the LDS Church. Chipman studied at Brigham Young Academy (the predecessor of Brigham Young University (BYU)) as a youth. From 1885 to 1887 he served as a Mormon missionary in the Southern States Mission of the LDS Church", "id": "15228384" }, { "contents": "Mountain Meadows massacre and Mormon public relations\n\n\nCannon, then president of the LDS California Mission. In the October 13, 1857 edition of Cannon's San Francisco newspaper \"The Western Standard\", Cannon responded to initial news reports of involvement by Mormons by charging the responsible journalists with writing \"reckless and malignant slanders\", despite knowing that the southern Utah Mormons were \"as innocent of [the massacre] as the child unborn\". The church's official newspaper in Salt Lake City, \"The Deseret News\", was initially slow to comment on the massacre,", "id": "22212632" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas the second-most senior apostle of the church after the death of Woodruff, Cannon did not become President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, as would be the practice in the LDS Church today. Rather, because Cannon was a member of the First Presidency, the church simply appointed the next senior apostle of the church—Brigham Young, Jr.—to be the quorum president. (Under today's practices, Cannon would have been appointed the president of the quorum and Young would have been appointed acting president.) Cannon", "id": "19825274" }, { "contents": "Clifford E. Young\n\n\nClifford Earle Young (December 7, 1883 – August 21, 1958) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1941 until his death. Young was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, the son of LDS Church leader Seymour B. Young. From 1905 to 1908, he served as a Mormon missionary in England and Germany. In 1928, Young became the president of the Alpine Stake of the LDS Church in Utah. In 1934, he joined the", "id": "8315768" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n33. Upon his joining the Quorum of the Twelve, Cannon was called to preside over the church's European Mission. Cannon's mission in Europe ended when he was recalled by Young in 1862 to work in Washington, D.C., to assist in the church's promotion of Utah Territory's bid for statehood. At the adjournment of the 1862 congressional session, Cannon again left for Europe to preside over the mission. In this capacity, Cannon was the editor of the \"Millennial Star\" and, for a short time,", "id": "19825271" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nfrom the federal authorities. In September 1888, Cannon surrendered himself and pleaded guilty at trial to charges of unlawful cohabitation under the Edmunds Act. As a result, Cannon served nearly six months in Utah's federal penitentiary. Cannon was pardoned in 1894 by U.S. President Grover Cleveland. Cannon died on April 12, 1901, in Monterey, California, at 74 years of age. Had he lived a few months longer, he would have become the President of the LDS Church: Lorenzo Snow died on October 10 of that year", "id": "19825280" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Isle of Man\n\n\nand Idaho which descends from the 19th century marriage of George Cannon and Ann Quayle before their emigration from Peel, Isle of Man. The family's most notable member was their oldest son George Quayle Cannon. The family is connected by marriage to the Bennion, Taylor, Wells and Young political families. LDS Membership statistics as of January 1, 2011 for the Isle of Man. The nation of the Isle of Man does not have its own mission. Instead it is served by an English mission. Five out of the six", "id": "7797107" }, { "contents": "The Contributor (LDS magazine)\n\n\nThe Contributor was an independent publication associated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) between 1879 and 1896. It was a monthly periodical and sought to represent the Young Men's and Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Associations (YMMIA and YLMIA respectively), the youth organizations of the LDS Church at the time. It was founded by Junius F. Wells, the inaugural head of the YMMIA. Abraham H. Cannon became editor when the magazine was purchased by the Cannon Publishing Company in 1892. With the", "id": "505110" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe official organ of the Sunday School until 1930, when it was replaced with \"The Instructor\". Cannon also served as the first general superintendent of the church's Sunday School from 1867 until his death. On April 8, 1873, Cannon became a member of the church's First Presidency when he was called as the first counselor by Brigham Young. Cannon went on to serve as counselor to three more presidents of the church: he was First Counselor to John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. Although Cannon", "id": "19825273" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\ntogether. Prior to her service in the general Primary presidency, Clara Cannon was a counselor in the presidencies of the Primary and Relief Society in the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. When Louie B. Felt became the first general presidency of the Primary, Matilda M. Barratt and Cannon were selected as Felt's counselors. Cannon was a counselor until 1895; the next year she was succeeded in the position by Josephine R. West. Clara Moses Cannon died of throat cancer in Centerville, Utah, aged 87 and was interred in", "id": "10663424" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nScouts of America and served in the organization's Great Salt Lake Council. Prior to his call as a general authority, Cannon served in the church as a bishop, stake president, patriarch, temple sealer, and regional representative. He was also the president of the church's Central British Mission from 1966 to 1969. From 1969 to 1972, Cannon was an assistant and counselor to W. Jay Eldredge, the general superintendent of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association. Cannon became a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy", "id": "8339580" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe Nauvoo Legion. During this time, Cannon served as printer of the \"Deseret News\" while it was publishing in exile in Fillmore, Utah. After the Utah War, he was called as president of the church's Eastern States Mission. The murder of Parley P. Pratt in 1857 created a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. That vacancy was not filled until Brigham Young called Cannon to the apostleship three years later. Cannon was ordained to the priesthood office of apostle on August 26, 1860, at age", "id": "19825270" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nin the Sandwich Islands (later known as the Kingdom of Hawaii), where he served for four years. While in the islands, Cannon converted many Native Hawaiians. One of the most notable was Jonatana Napela, who assisted Cannon in translating the Book of Mormon into Hawaiian. Joseph F. Smith, a future church president, would follow Cannon and serve in Hawaii one year later. Returning to Utah Territory, Cannon married Elizabeth Hoagland (daughter of Abraham Hoagland and his wife.) He was almost immediately called to assist apostle", "id": "19825268" }, { "contents": "Ronald E. Poelman\n\n\nRonald Eugene Poelman (May 10, 1928 – November 19, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 until his death. In 1984, he delivered a controversial sermon in the LDS Church's general conference which the church redacted before publishing. Poelman was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to a Latter-day Saint family. As a young man, he served as a Mormon missionary in the LDS Church's Netherlands Mission. He began his", "id": "4765396" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\n. He would marry Martha Brown of Ogden in 1878. In 1891 he helped to organize the Utah Republican Party. After a failed bid to become delegate from the Utah Territory, he succeeded and served from March 4, 1895, to January 4, 1896. Cannon was chosen in 1896 to serve as senator by the Utah Legislature in spite of LDS church leadership favoring his father for the job. He served in the United States Senate, initially, as a member of the Republican Party; however, he later became a", "id": "11000346" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nmember of the Silver Republican Party, founded by his successor (and future employer at \"The Salt Lake Tribune\") Thomas Kearns. Cannon lost re-election in 1899. Utah's state legislators indicated they would not support Cannon for re-election shortly after the November 1898 elections. Cannon had voted against the Dingley Act, which would have raised tariffs on sugar and helped the Utah sugar industry. It was strongly supported by the LDS Church hierarchy, who now opposed his re-election. Other factors were his support", "id": "11000347" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand Ghana. The first convert baptized in Africa was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and his wife were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' centre in Nauvoo, Illinois. For three months in 1989, Cannon was the interim president of the LDS Church's Germany Hamburg Mission; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. After his interim service as mission president, Cannon was the second president of the Frankfurt Germany Temple from 1989 to", "id": "9582827" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nCounselor to William B. Preston, the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church; he served in this position between 1884 and 1886. In 1884, shortly after Cannon had become a general authority, a sensationalized news story by Joseph Lippman in the \"Salt Lake Tribune\" alleged that Cannon had taken his wife's sister Louie Wells as a plural wife. Lippman suggested that Cannon and Wells had been married in the Logan Temple. In fact, there had been no such marriage, though it was later revealed that Cannon and Wells had", "id": "7202724" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nbranches of the LDS Church in Nigeria and Ghana. The first convert baptized in Nigeria was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and her husband were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' center in Nauvoo, Illinois. In 1989, they served as interim leaders of the Germany Hamburg Mission of the church; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. From 1989 to 1992, Cannon was the matron of the Frankfurt Germany Temple while her husband", "id": "9582966" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\n's Quorum of the Twelve. Abraham was a son of George Q. Cannon, an early member of the church's First Presidency. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary in the church's Central States Mission. After his mission, he served in the United States Air Force during the Second World War. In 1946, he began attending Brigham Young University (BYU). After graduating from BYU, Cannon became a vice president of Beneficial Life Insurance Company in Salt Lake City. He was active in the Boy", "id": "8339579" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\n1925, Cannon became the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church, succeeding Charles W. Nibley. Cannon's counselors were David A. Smith and John Wells. In 1938, Cannon was released as Presiding Bishop and was succeeded by LeGrand Richards. At the same time, Cannon was ordained an apostle and made an \"associate\" of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, a unique position that had never been filled before. When Quorum member Melvin J. Ballard died the next year, Cannon became a full member of the Quorum; he served", "id": "2194374" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\nClarissa Cordelia (\"Clara\") Moses Cannon (April 21, 1839 – August 21, 1926) was a Mormon pioneer and a member of the first-ever general presidency of the Primary organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). She was the second counselor to general president Louie B. Felt from 1880 to 1895. Clara Moses was born in Westfield, Massachusetts. In 1846 she took the six-month journey on the ship \"Brooklyn\" from New York City to San", "id": "10663422" }, { "contents": "Leonora Cannon Taylor\n\n\nLeonora Cannon Taylor (October 6, 1796–December 9, 1868) was a member of the Relief Society organization at the time of its origin and the first wife of John Taylor, the third president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). On October 6, 1796 in Peel, Isle of Man, Leonora Cannon was born to George Cannon and Leonora Callister. As the oldest daughter in the family, when Leonora's father died when she was thirteen she went away to London to work", "id": "16190675" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\ntheir books, which were then distributed by others. However, Cannon & Sons distributed several important books through their stores and mail order (see table). The company had extensive ties to the LDS Church-owned newspaper, the \"Deseret News.\" Five of Cannon's sons held important positions in the paper, and Cannon himself was editor between 1867 and 1872, and again while temporarily owning the paper from 1892 to 1898. Nearly every George Q. Cannon & Sons book was printed on the \"Deseret News\" press", "id": "18344086" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nof the Utah Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Cannon was the oldest son of George Q. Cannon and the one most expected to follow in his prominent father's footsteps in politics, church office, and journalism. Heber J. Grant once said of Cannon: \"There probably is not a young man in the church who had had more opportunities and advantages extended to him educationally, spiritually, and every other way than John Q. Cannon.\" At the age of 27, Cannon was called to serve as the Second", "id": "7202723" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nMartha Maria \"Mattie\" Hughes Cannon (July 1, 1857 – July 10, 1932) was a Welsh-born immigrant to the United States, a polygamous wife, physician, Utah women's rights advocate and suffragist, and Utah State Senator. Her family immigrated to the United States as converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and traveled West to settle in Utah territory with other Mormons. She started working at the age of fourteen. At sixteen she enrolled in the University", "id": "15993465" }, { "contents": "Church Office Building\n\n\nThe Church Office Building is a 28-story building in Salt Lake City, Utah, which houses the administrative support staff for the lay ministry of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) throughout the world. The building is 420 ft (128 m) tall at roof level and is located within the Temple Square complex on the corner of North Temple and State Street. The building was designed by George Cannon Young at a cost of US$31 million to build. Construction took place from 1962 to 1972", "id": "13754819" }, { "contents": "John Lyman Smith\n\n\nJohn Lyman Smith (November 17, 1828 – February 21, 1898) was an American politician and Mormon missionary. He served as a member of the Utah Territory's Legislative Assembly's House of Representatives for Iron County, Utah, from 1852 to 1853, and the Great Salt Lake County, Utah, from 1853 to 1855. Cousin of the founder of the Latter Day Saint Movement, Joseph Smith, Smith was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) who traveled to the", "id": "18219861" }, { "contents": "Francis M. Lyman\n\n\nFrancis Marion Lyman (January 12, 1840 – November 18, 1916) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was the President of the Quorum from 1903 until his death. Lyman's father and son were also apostles in the church: his father was Amasa M. Lyman and his son was Richard R. Lyman. Both his father and son were excommunicated from the church while serving as apostles. Francis M. Lyman was born as", "id": "20761093" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nAngus Munn Cannon (May 17, 1834 – June 7, 1915) was an early Latter Day Saint leader and Mormon pioneer. Cannon was born in Liverpool, Lancashire, England. His Manx parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 1840, being baptized by his uncle John Taylor. In 1842, the Cannon family went to Nauvoo, Illinois, United States. By 1849, they were in Utah Territory. Cannon was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon and their lives followed very similar paths up", "id": "7202650" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\naffairs while Taylor recovered. This training would serve him well in later life. Cannon's father died in 1845. In 1846, Taylor traveled to England to organize the affairs of the church after Smith's death. Meanwhile, Cannon accompanied Taylor's wife and family as they moved to Winter Quarters, Nebraska. When Taylor returned, Cannon traveled with the entire Taylor family to the Salt Lake Valley, arriving in October 1847. In 1849, Cannon was asked by church president Brigham Young to serve as a missionary for the church", "id": "19825267" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nstaying in the position until December 31, 1903. Cannon attempted to prohibit children not vaccinated from attending school in case of a disease outbreak. The Board of Health sent out vaccines; however, the \"Deseret News\" spread information that vaccines weren't safe. LDS Church leaders were divided on the subject. One apostle, Brigham Young Jr. was very vocal in his opinions, writing in the \"Deseret News\" about the evils of vaccinations. The influence of the \"Deseret News\" and Mormon religious leaders limited how many", "id": "15993490" }, { "contents": "Billy Johnson (Mormon)\n\n\nLDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball announced Official Declaration 2 which extended the priesthood to all worthy male members of the church regardless of race or color. In gratitude, Johnson sent a letter to Kimball, explaining that God had prepared the people in Ghana, asking him to send missionaries to the members. Kimball responded to his pleas and sent the first called missionaries Rendell N. Mabey and Rachel Mabey. They joined Edwin Q. Cannon and Janath R. Cannon. Johnson was finally baptized into the LDS Church on December 9, 1978. He", "id": "4108521" }, { "contents": "Juvenile Instructor\n\n\ncatechisms on the Bible, Book of Mormon, and Doctrine and Covenants; musical compositions; illustrations; stories; editorial teachings; and other aids to gospel instruction. It was the first magazine for children published in the United States west of the Mississippi River. For much of its history, \"The Juvenile Instructor\" was owned by the Cannon family. Its first editor was George Q. Cannon, an apostle in the LDS Church. Cannon and his family continued to publish the magazine privately until January 1, 1901, when the", "id": "9210614" }, { "contents": "Joseph F. Smith\n\n\nand as second counselor to Lorenzo Snow (1898–1901). Smith was appointed first counselor to Snow on the death of first counselor George Q. Cannon, but, as Snow himself died only four days later, Smith never served in that position. He succeeded Snow as president of the LDS Church and president of the Salt Lake Temple. He served as president of the temple until 1911, when he transferred the responsibility to Anthon H. Lund. Smith also served as editor of the \"Improvement Era\" and \"Juvenile Instructor\",", "id": "4117444" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in California\n\n\nQ. Cannon began publication in San Francisco of the \"Western Standard\", a weekly periodical supportive of the Church. The first colonization from Utah to California came in 1851 when a company of about 450 saints and slaves under direction of Elders Amasa M. Lyman and Charles C. Rich of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles settled at what is now San Bernardino. The colony was the final settlement in a string of Mormon communities extending from Salt Lake City in an area known as Deseret. The community thrived, and on July 6,", "id": "22187256" }, { "contents": "Sunday School (LDS Church)\n\n\nout. On November 11, 1867, Young and church leaders Daniel H. Wells, George A. Smith, Wilford Woodruff, George Q. Cannon, and Brigham Young, Jr. met and organized the Parent Sunday School Union. Young appointed Cannon as the first general superintendent of the Sunday School, a position he would hold until his death in 1901. In 1872, the Sunday School organization was renamed the Deseret Sunday School Union. The organized Sunday School addressed lesson topics and source materials, grading, prizes and rewards, use of hymns", "id": "8671425" }, { "contents": "Hugh W. Pinnock\n\n\nHugh Wallace Pinnock (January 15, 1934 – December 16, 2000) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Pinnock was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Western States Mission. Pinnock graduated from University of Utah in 1958, where he became a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity and Owl and Key. Prior to his call to the First", "id": "8519001" }, { "contents": "Charles W. Penrose\n\n\nwas organized Penrose was called as a member of the high council. In 1877, Penrose became the assistant editor of the LDS Church-owned \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, working under George Q. Cannon. Penrose was known for his writing, including missionary tracts and lyrics of Latter-day Saint hymns, including \"God of Our Fathers\", \"O Ye Mountains High\", and \"Up, Awake, Ye Defenders of Zion\". In 1880, Penrose became the editor-in-chief of", "id": "2194239" }, { "contents": "Rulon S. Wells\n\n\nRulon Seymour Wells (July 7, 1854 – May 7, 1941) was a Utah politician and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1893 until his death. Wells was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to LDS Church leader Daniel H. Wells (1814–1891) and Louisa Free (1824–1886). In 1875, Wells travelled to Europe as a Mormon missionary and worked primarily in Germany and Switzerland. He returned to the United States in 1877. On", "id": "8315459" }, { "contents": "G. Homer Durham\n\n\nGeorge Homer Durham (February 4, 1911 – January 10, 1985) was an American academic administrator and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Durham was born in Parowan, Utah, and was raised in Salt Lake City. As a boy in grade school, he met and became lifelong friends with future LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley. As a young man, Durham served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the British", "id": "21588256" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nJonatana Napela or Jonathan Hawaii Napela (first name also spelled Iohatana, full name Napelakapuonamahanaonaleleonalani) (September 11, 1813 – August 6, 1879) was one of the earliest Hawaiian converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Hawaii, joining in the 1830s. He helped translate the Book of Mormon into the Hawaiian language, as \"Ka Buke a Moramona,\" working with missionary George Q. Cannon. Napela was appointed to serve as a superintendent of the colony at Kalaupapa, Molokai", "id": "16647246" }, { "contents": "Richfield, Utah\n\n\nserves about 600 students per year. As in most settled areas of rural Utah, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) plays a prominent role. The Mormons were highly industrious colonizers. From 1847, when they founded Salt Lake City, until 1877, they founded 360 towns. Following direction from Brigham Young, Latter-day Saints founded the town and outlying hamlets about 150 years ago. Members of the LDS Church are predominant among the residents. Even in this heart of Mormon country,", "id": "11082836" }, { "contents": "Marvin O. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Owen Ashton (April 8, 1883 – October 7, 1946) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1938 until his death. Prior to becoming a general authority, Ashton was a prominent local leader of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City, Utah. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Mormon parents. He married Rachel Grace Jeremy in 1906 and in 1907 went to England as a missionary for the LDS Church. He returned", "id": "14505232" }, { "contents": "LeGrand Richards\n\n\nLeGrand Richards (February 6, 1886 – January 11, 1983) was a prominent missionary and leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He served as the seventh presiding bishop of the LDS Church from 1938 to 1952, and was then called as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles by church president David O. McKay. Richards served in the Quorum of the Twelve until his death in Salt Lake City, Utah, at the age of 96. Richards was born in", "id": "2294374" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nwas educated at Lahainaluna School. Napela was trained as a lawyer. He was serving as a judge in Wailuku, Hawaii, when he met American George Q. Cannon, a member of the LDS Church on a missionary trip to Hawaii. After Napela's conversion in the 1830s to the LDS Church, the government forced the judge to resign from his position. The LDS Church was regarded with suspicion. LDS Church historian Andrew Jensen said that Napela \"did splendid missionary work for the Church.\" Napela was sent on a specific", "id": "16647248" }, { "contents": "Gardo House\n\n\ncounselor George Q. Cannon and other church leaders suggested that Taylor occupy the Gardo House after its completion, but he repeatedly refused. However, when church members unanimously voted on April 9, 1879, to make the Gardo House the official parsonage for LDS Church presidents, Taylor reluctantly accepted their decision. Moses Thatcher, William Jennings, and Angus M. Cannon were appointed as a committee to oversee completion of the mansion. On December 27, 1881, the Deseret News published a letter from John Taylor announcing a public reception and tour of", "id": "1496184" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nStates Mission of the church in 1901. In 1902, Grant married George J. Cannon. In 1923, Cannon was asked to succeed Mae Taylor Nystrom as the second counselor to Martha Horne Tingey, the general president of what was then called the Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Association. In 1929, when Ruth May Fox succeeded Tingey, Cannon was asked to be her first counselor. Cannon served in this capacity until 1929, when Fox was released and Cannon was selected by her father, who was President of the Church, to", "id": "1681854" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\n. (At the time, Cannon was a counselor to James E. Faust in the church's International Mission, which had jurisdiction over all areas of the world not otherwise part of a mission.) After Bateman and Cannon reported the results of their trip, Cannon and his wife were called and set apart as the first Mormon missionaries to black Africa. They—along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey—preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 35 branches and 5 districts of the LDS Church in Nigeria", "id": "9582826" }, { "contents": "Marion D. Hanks\n\n\nMarion Duff Hanks (October 13, 1921 – August 5, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1953 until his death. Hanks was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man he served in the Northern States Mission of the LDS Church, which was headquartered in Chicago. He was in the United States Navy during World War II and received a J.D. from the University of Utah. Prior to his call as a general authority", "id": "6558935" }, { "contents": "Lillie T. Freeze\n\n\nthe Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association (YLMIA). In this capacity, she was invited to speak at the Salt Lake Tabernacle on April 6, 1880, at a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the LDS Church's founding. In 1880, Lillie Freeze was one of the founding members of the LDS Church's Primary Association. Freeze was appointed as the first secretary of the general presidency, which was composed of Louie B. Felt, Matilda M. Barratt, and Clara C. M. Cannon. Freeze was secretary until 1888, when", "id": "10906695" }, { "contents": "Henry D. Taylor\n\n\nHenry Dixon Taylor (November 22, 1903 – February 24, 1987) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1958 until his death. Taylor was born in Provo, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Eastern States Mission. During his mission, Taylor was the president of the church's Connecticut District. Taylor received a bachelor's degree from Brigham Young University (BYU) and a master's degree", "id": "2477100" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas elected to be the non-voting delegate for Utah Territory in the United States Congress in 1872. He remained a congressional delegate until 1882, when his seat was declared vacant by the enactment of the Edmunds Act, which terminated many political and civil rights for Utah's Mormon polygamists. By 1880, Cannon had served four terms in Congress as Territorial Delegate. The newly appointed anti-Mormon territorial governor, Eli Houston Murray, openly supported the Liberal Party, which generally opposed church candidates. The 1880 territory-wide election", "id": "19825275" }, { "contents": "George F. Richards\n\n\nGeorge Franklin Richards (February 23, 1861 – August 8, 1950) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from April 9, 1906 until his death. He also served as Acting Presiding Patriarch of the LDS Church from 1937 to 1942 and President of the Quorum of the Twelve from May 25, 1945 until his death. Richards was born in Farmington, Utah Territory, the son of Franklin D. Richards and Nanny Longstroth. Richards", "id": "2194252" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\n1882, at the age of 23, Cannon assumed business control of the \"Juvenile Instructor\" and associated publications. He continued his management until his death. In October 1892, Cannon and his brother John Q. Cannon took control of the \"Deseret News\" publishing. He also became the editor and publisher of \"The Contributor\". On October 9, 1882, Cannon became a member of the First Seven Presidents of the Seventy of the church. On October 7, 1889, church president Wilford Woodruff named Cannon a member", "id": "9035316" }, { "contents": "Howard Cannon\n\n\nHis grandfather David Cannon, was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon, and a leading figure in the building of the St. George Temple, who was later the third president of that temple. His father Walter Cannon was one of David Cannon's 31 children. Howard's parents had married in 1909, his mother was Leah Sullivan. When Cannon was two years old his father left for England to served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for two years. Cannon went to Woodward School in", "id": "18060013" }, { "contents": "Mormon fiction\n\n\nMormons were generally non-fiction, including scripture, missionary tracts, and doctrinal literature. In 1844, Parley P. Pratt published what is commonly cited as the first work of LDS fiction, the didactic \"Dialogue between Joseph Smith and the Devil\". It was first published in the New York Herald. Early Mormon leaders like Brigham Young and George Q. Cannon condemned novels for wasting time, a rhetoric that persisted until the 1880s. Fiction among LDS Church members developed once the Mormons had settled in Utah and developed a degree of", "id": "453087" }, { "contents": "Marvin J. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Jeremy Ashton (May 6, 1915 – February 25, 1994) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1971 until his death. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was the son of Marvin O. Ashton, a local LDS leader, who later became a church general authority. The younger Ashton worked in the lumber business as a youth. He graduated from the University of Utah. He served a", "id": "19825413" }, { "contents": "Rudger Clawson\n\n\nRudger Judd Clawson (March 12, 1857 – June 21, 1943) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1898 until his death in 1943. He also served as President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1921 until his death and as a member of the First Presidency of the LDS Church for five days in 1901. Clawson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to Hiram Bradley Clawson and Margaret Judd", "id": "9035430" }, { "contents": "Utah-Idaho Sugar Company\n\n\npayment and a $130,000 loan. Cutler also went to Chicago and New York City to secure loans from banks; he came back, via train, with a bag full of money, as he did not think any banks in Utah could have cashed the large bank draft. The LDS church made more payments and secured more loans. In addition, George Q. Cannon and Heber J. Grant personally funded the enterprise. Joseph F. Smith, president of the LDS Church, gave a sermon in 1893 explaining that this was done to", "id": "1319991" }, { "contents": "President of the Church (LDS Church)\n\n\nthe President of the Quorum. When Woodruff died, his counselors returned to the Quorum based on the date they were ordained an apostle, placing George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith below Brigham Young Jr. and John Willard Young. Heber J. Grant objected to that arguing that seniority should be based on ordination to the Quorum rather than ordination as an apostle. Young argued that an apostle should not be demoted as long as he is worthy of the position. On March 31, 1900, Snow met with his counselors, Cannon and", "id": "16343191" }, { "contents": "Alfred W. McCune\n\n\n. Judge Orlando Powers, Associate Justice of the Utah Supreme Court, said in 1906 that he understood that McCune was not a Mormon. Frank J. Cannon, too, claimed McCune was not a Mormon, and B. H. Roberts, LDS Church historian and member of the First Council of the Seventy, said in 1930 that McCune was not a church member. Historian Orvin Malmquist, however, says that church records show he was baptized into the LDS Church at the age of eight in 1857, and that his marriage to Elizabeth", "id": "15062757" } ]
Joseph Jenne Cannon ( May 22 , 1877 -- November 5 , 1945 ) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ( LDS Church ) . He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family . As a young man , Cannon served as a for the LDS Church in Europe . He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903 . Lyman and Cannon also similarly dedicated Finland in 1903 . In the 1908 election , Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from . He served one term , from 1909 to 1911 . Cannon was not formally associated with any political party . From 1931 to 1934 , Cannon was the editor of the [START_ENT] Deseret News [END_ENT] , a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church . His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church 's British Mission . Cannon served in this capacity for three years , until 1937 . Immediately following his return to Utah , Cannon was asked to become the first assistant to George Q. Morris , the general superintendent of the church 's . Cannon served in this capacity until his death from pancreatic cancer
67d86370-f143-4509-862e-8d6099c7a866_Joseph_J._Canno:11
[{"answer": "Deseret News", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "1046373", "title": "Deseret News"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nJoseph Jenne Cannon (May 22, 1877 – November 5, 1945) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Europe. He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in St. Petersburg and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903. Lyman and Cannon", "id": "13710370" }, { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nalso similarly dedicated Finland in 1903. In the 1908 election, Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. He served one term, from 1909 to 1911. Cannon was not formally associated with any political party. From 1931 to 1934, Cannon was the editor of the \"Deseret News\", a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church. His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church's British Mission. Cannon served in this", "id": "13710371" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nSylvester Quayle Cannon (June 10, 1877 – May 29, 1943) was an American businessman, engineer, and religious leader who served as the sixth presiding bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1925 to 1938 and a member of church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1939 until his death. He was the son of George Q. Cannon, an apostle and member of the church's First Presidency. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. He studied", "id": "2194372" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nJohn Quayle Cannon (April 19, 1857 – January 14, 1931) was an editor-in-chief of the \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, Utah, and a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He also served as a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army during the Spanish–American War. He was the son of LDS Church apostle George Q. Cannon and Elizabeth Hoagland. He was married to Elizabeth \"Annie\" Wells Cannon. Cannon", "id": "7202721" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nFrank Jenne Cannon (January 25, 1859July 25, 1933) was the first United States Senator from Utah, who served from 1896 to 1899. Born in Salt Lake City, he was the eldest child of Sarah Jenne Cannon and George Q. Cannon. His father was an Apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and later was a member of its First Presidency. After attending the school in Salt Lake City, he studied at University of Deseret, graduating at the age of 19", "id": "11000345" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nEdwin Quayle \"Ted\" Cannon, Jr. (May 6, 1918 – April 6, 2005) was a Utah politician and businessman and was a prominent leader and missionary in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was among the first missionaries in the LDS Church to preach to black people in Africa and was part of the first group missionaries sent to establish official congregations of the LDS Church in West Africa. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Edwin Q. Cannon,", "id": "9582822" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Ivins Cannon (March 9, 1920 – August 4, 2009) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1986 to 1991. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, Cannon was the son of George J. Cannon and Lucy Grant Cannon, a leader of the youth in the LDS Church. His maternal grandfather was Heber J. Grant, the seventh president of the LDS Church. His paternal grandfather was Abraham H. Cannon, who was a member of the church", "id": "8339578" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nLucy Grant Cannon (October 22, 1880 – May 7, 1966) was the fourth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1937 to 1948. She was a member of the general presidency of the Young Women from 1923 to 1948, serving as a counselor to two presidents. Lucy Grant was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Lucy Stringham and LDS Church apostle Heber J. Grant. She served as a church missionary in the Western", "id": "1681853" }, { "contents": "George Mousley Cannon\n\n\nTrust Company. He served as a delegate to the 1895 Utah State Constitutional Convention and chaired the committee which formulated the articles on taxation and public debt. In 1896, Cannon was elected to the Utah State Senate and served as its first president. When The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) modified stake boundaries in 1900, dividing the new Granite Stake off from the Salt Lake Stake, Cannon became the Sunday School Superintendent of the new stake. From 1901 until after 1930, Cannon served as", "id": "8629874" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nat the University of Utah and then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received a B.S. degree in mining engineering. In 1899, Cannon began an LDS Church mission in Belgium. Cannon then served from 1900 to 1902 as president of the church's Netherlands–Belgium Mission. Cannon also served as Francis M. Lyman's secretary on a three-month trip to many nations along the Mediterranean and in the Middle East. From 1916 to 1925, Cannon served as president of the Pioneer Stake in Salt Lake City. In", "id": "2194373" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\nAbraham Hoagland Cannon (also reported as Abram H. Cannon) (March 12, 1859 – July 19, 1896) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. His parents were George Q. Cannon, a Latter Day Saints apostle, and Elizabeth Hoagland, daughter of Abraham Hoagland. Cannon studied at Deseret University. Later, he studied architecture under Obed Taylor. Cannon married Sarah A.", "id": "9035314" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nSr. and Luella Wareing. He was born at his parents' home because of the 1918 influenza pandemic. Cannon's paternal grandfather was George Q. Cannon, a Mormon pioneer and prominent leader in the LDS Church. Cannon was raised in Salt Lake City. In 1937, Cannon went on a mission for the LDS Church to Nazi Germany. He was president of a branch of the church in Berlin in 1939 when the LDS Church evacuated its missionaries from Europe at the beginning of World War II. Cannon finished his mission in", "id": "9582823" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\n. Callville was submerged when Lake Mead was filled. In 1869 and 1870, Cannon served a second mission in the Eastern United States. In April 1876, Cannon became president of the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. He served in this position until April 1, 1904. After his time as stake president, Cannon served as a patriarch in the church. Cannon was the mayor of St. George, Utah Territory in 1861 and 1862. In 1896, after Utah had become a U.S. state, he stood for election", "id": "7202652" }, { "contents": "Donald Q. Cannon\n\n\nDonald Quayle Cannon (born 1936) is a retired professor at Brigham Young University who specializes in Mormon history, particularly early Mormon history and international Mormon history. As a young man, Cannon was a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Germany. Cannon earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Utah. Cannon holds a Ph.D. from Clark University. In the late 1960s, he taught at the University of Southern Maine. In the LDS Church he has", "id": "10057919" }, { "contents": "George Goddard (Mormon)\n\n\nwas the clerk to LDS Church presiding bishop Edward Hunter. From 1874 to 1884, Goddard was the clerk of the LDS Church's biannual general conferences. In 1872, Goddard became the inaugural first assistant to George Q. Cannon, the first superintendent of the Deseret Sunday School Union. Goddard served in this capacity for 26 years, until his death in 1899. Goddard was also a member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and a patriarch in the church. He died in Salt Lake City and was buried at Salt Lake City Cemetery.", "id": "7701639" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nuntil their arrival in Utah. In 1854, Cannon went on a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to the Eastern United States, where he assisted John Taylor in publishing a periodical entitled \"The Mormon\". He also preached and baptized in Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware. Cannon returned to Utah Territory due to the troubles connected with the Utah War. In 1864, Cannon helped establish Call's Landing on the Colorado River, later known as Callville, Nevada", "id": "7202651" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nJanath Russell Cannon (October 28, 1918 – July 5, 2007) was a counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was also a prominent missionary in the church and was among the first to preach to black people in Africa. Born in Ogden, Utah, Janath Russell was educated at Wellesley College. In 1941, she married Edwin Q. Cannon in the Salt Lake Temple. From 1971 to 1974,", "id": "9582964" }, { "contents": "Joseph A. Cannon\n\n\nserved as an assistant administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from 1983 to 1985. Joseph A. Cannon was born on July 31, 1949. Cannon served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Ireland, including on the Isle of Man, the ancestral homeland of the Cannons. Cannon received a degree in political science and, in 1977, a law degree from Brigham Young University. Cannon served as a law clerk in Salt Lake City for U.S. District", "id": "7202830" }, { "contents": "Elaine A. Cannon\n\n\nElaine Anderson Cannon (April 9, 1922 – May 19, 2003) was the eighth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 to 1984. Cannon has been a writer and an editor and is the author of over 50 books. Elaine Anderson was born to Aldon Joseph and Minnie Egan Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a teenager, she started writing a daily column aimed at teenagers for the \"Deseret News\". She", "id": "1682052" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nAdele Morris Cannon Howells (January 11, 1886 – April 14, 1951) was the fourth general president of the Primary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1943 until her death of rheumatic heart disease. She contributed to \"The Children's Friend\" magazine, as well as the fundraising for the Children's Primary Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. Adele Morris Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to George Mousley Cannon and Marian Adelaide Morris. She", "id": "1336419" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\nGeorgius Young Cannon (March 6, 1892 – March 29, 1987) was a 20th-century architect in the American West who operated principally out of Salt Lake City, Utah. Cannon trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), graduating in 1918. He then joined the army and later returned to Utah to intern with the architectural firm Ware & Treganza and Cannon & Fetzer. He served two missions to Germany for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). For a time", "id": "12786285" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Quayle Cannon (January 11, 1827 – April 12, 1901) was an early member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), and served in the First Presidency under four successive presidents of the church: Brigham Young, John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. He was the church's chief political strategist, and was dubbed \"the Mormon premier\" and \"the Mormon Richelieu\" by the press. He was also a five", "id": "19825263" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nwas the oldest of nine children, and her father George Cannon was the first president of the Utah State Senate. As a child, Cannon suffered from rheumatic fever. She enjoyed reading in her spare time and horseback riding. She was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Cannon attended schools in Salt Lake City and graduated from the LDS High School and Business College in 1903. She attended the University of Utah and studied physical education and graduated with her bachelor's degree in 1909. Cannon", "id": "1336420" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nis one of the few general authorities of the LDS Church to have been excommunicated. From 1889 until 1892, Cannon was the editor of the \"Ogden Standard\". From October 1892 until April 1898, he was the editor in chief of the \"Deseret News\". After the Spanish–American War he returned to work at the \"Deseret News\" and served as an executive editor of the newspaper off-and-on until his death. He was much beloved by his co-workers. Cannon was a member", "id": "7202722" }, { "contents": "Tracy Y. Cannon\n\n\nLatter-day Saints. In 1939, he was made second assistant to Melvin J. Ballard, supervisor of the committee. From 1915 to 1927, Cannon was a member of the high council of the Pioneer Stake of the LDS Church. In 1917, he became a member of the Deseret Sunday School Union General Board. From 1930 through 1936, Cannon was bishop of the Cannon Ward in Salt Lake City. Cannon was an editor of the 1927 LDS Church hymnal. In 1925, Cannon was appointed director of the McCune School", "id": "12019030" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe church's Welsh-language periodical, \"Udgorn Seion\". From 1867 to 1874, Cannon was the managing editor of the \"Deseret News\". It was under his direction that the newspaper was first published on a daily basis. In 1866, Cannon began publication of a magazine for youth and young adult Latter-day Saints called \"The Juvenile Instructor\". He owned and published this magazine until his death; in 1901 his family sold the magazine to the LDS Church's Sunday School organization. The periodical was", "id": "19825272" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nCannon and her husband were heads of the Switzerland Mission of the LDS Church. Upon their return to Utah in 1974, Cannon became the first counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the church's Relief Society. Cannon served in this capacity until 1978, when she was released so that she and her husband could become the first missionaries of the church to preach in \"black Africa\". They — along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey — preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 27", "id": "9582965" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\nan LDS Church organization responsible for educating young members of the LDS church, and the magazine was the first church periodical oriented toward youth. Cannon opened the George Q. Cannon & Sons bookstore in 1867 to sell the magazine and other publications of an uplifting nature. Cannon believed that secular novels did not reflect Latter-day Saint values. In the 1880s, Cannon expanded with a branch in Ogden, Utah. It is not known how many books Cannon & Sons actually published itself. In this era, authors commonly self-published", "id": "18344085" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n. Cannon was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. Cannon fathered 32 children, some of whom are Abraham H. Cannon, John Q. Cannon, and Sylvester Q. Cannon, who all became general authorities of the LDS Church; Frank J. Cannon, Utah's first U.S. Senator; and Lewis T. Cannon and Georgius Y. Cannon, prominent architects in Utah. Some of Cannon's prominent descendants include Howard Cannon, U.S. Senator from Nevada from 1959 to 1983 and Chris Cannon, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1997 to", "id": "19825281" }, { "contents": "Salt Lake City Council Hall\n\n\nwho was then the official architect for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Built at First South and 120 East (more on Salt Lake City's coordinate system), sandstone for the structure was delivered from Red Butte Canyon on Utah's first chartered railroad. The well-furnished Greek revival building was completed at a cost of $70,000. In January 1866, City Hall was dedicated by George Q. Cannon, a prominent LDS leader. Many other LDS leaders attended the dedication including Brigham", "id": "19382830" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\n, Cannon moved to Los Angeles and worked as the office manager of his MIT schoolmate Wallace Neff. He later returned to Utah and designed numerous buildings, mostly residences, and some of which remain on the National Register of Historic Places. Among his works were meetinghouses of the LDS Church and other civic buildings. Cannon served on a church-appointed board of six architects that oversaw the construction of the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple. Cannon was the youngest of 32 children born to LDS Church leader George Q. Cannon. His mother,", "id": "12786286" }, { "contents": "Karl G. Maeser\n\n\nin the General Superintendency of the Deseret Sunday School Union. He was the Second Assistant to General Superintendent George Q. Cannon from July 1894 to January 1899. He then served as the First Assistant to Cannon from January 1899 until February 1901. Maeser also participated in the Utah constitutional convention after Abraham Smoot's death in 1895. He proposed an article to support prohibition, but later backed down. Missionaries from the LDS Church were removed from California in 1858 due to the Utah War. Missionary work resumed in 1892. Maeser presided over", "id": "11030473" }, { "contents": "Frank B. Woodbury\n\n\nFrank Bartlett Woodbury (December 27, 1867 – December 21, 1962) was a leader of and an Acting Presiding Patriarch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), one of only three church members to hold this position in church history. Born in St. George, Utah Territory, to Orin Nelson Woodbury and Ann Cannon, Woodbury served in many capacities in the church on a local level. Some, but not all, LDS Church sources list Woodbury as \"Acting Presiding Patriarch\" of", "id": "8238754" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand 1958 and served three full terms. From 1964 to 1971, Cannon was a bishop of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. From 1971 to 1974, he was the president of the Switzerland Mission of the church. In 1978, three weeks after the LDS Church announced that it would no longer impose restrictions of black people receiving the priesthood or participating in temple ordinances, Cannon traveled to Africa on behalf of the church with Merrill J. Bateman to assess the prospects for church missionary work and growth in \"black Africa\"", "id": "9582825" }, { "contents": "Amasa Lyman\n\n\n). Lyman served as the first mayor of San Bernardino. In 1860, Young appointed three of the twelve apostles—Lyman, Charles C. Rich, and George Q. Cannon—to the presidency of the church's European Mission. On March 16, 1862, Lyman preached a sermon in Dundee, Scotland, which all but denied the reality of and the necessity for the atonement of Jesus Christ, which is a central tenet of the LDS Church. His speech appeared to have been overlooked for years, but on January 21", "id": "12068047" }, { "contents": "Mark E. Petersen\n\n\nMark Edward Petersen (November 7, 1900 – January 11, 1984) was an American news editor and religious leader who served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1944 until his death. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, he filled the vacancy in the Quorum caused by the excommunication of Richard R. Lyman. Petersen had become managing editor of the church-owned \"Deseret News\" in 1935 and editor in 1941.", "id": "2692480" }, { "contents": "Thomas C. Griggs\n\n\nthe LDS Church's Aaronic priesthood; his call to this office was given by Apostle George Q. Cannon. With the outbreak of the American Civil War, the Griggs heeded the counsel of LDS Church leaders to move to Utah Territory. The Griggs crossed the plains in Joseph Horne's Mormon pioneer company in 1861. Griggs first joined the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in 1866 when Charles John Thomas was the director. Griggs would continue as a member of the choir until his death in 1903. While Robert Sands was the conductor of the choir", "id": "9481149" }, { "contents": "Charles Clarence Neslen\n\n\nfrom Germany and he was imprisoned in Danzig. He served as president of the Königsberg District of the LDS Church for a part of his mission. Neslen was a member of the Democratic Party and a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1912. Neslen worked a total of 15 years for the \"Deseret News\". He was also a realtor and for a time served as secretary of the Salt Lake Real Estate Association. On October 26, 1905, Neslen married Grace T. Cannon, a daughter of George Q. Cannon.", "id": "21092533" }, { "contents": "Stephen L. Chipman\n\n\nStephen L. Chipman (1864–1945) was a member of the Utah State Legislature in 1903 and a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Utah County. He was also the first president of the Salt Lake Temple who was not also an apostle in the LDS Church. Chipman studied at Brigham Young Academy (the predecessor of Brigham Young University (BYU)) as a youth. From 1885 to 1887 he served as a Mormon missionary in the Southern States Mission of the LDS Church", "id": "15228384" }, { "contents": "Mountain Meadows massacre and Mormon public relations\n\n\nCannon, then president of the LDS California Mission. In the October 13, 1857 edition of Cannon's San Francisco newspaper \"The Western Standard\", Cannon responded to initial news reports of involvement by Mormons by charging the responsible journalists with writing \"reckless and malignant slanders\", despite knowing that the southern Utah Mormons were \"as innocent of [the massacre] as the child unborn\". The church's official newspaper in Salt Lake City, \"The Deseret News\", was initially slow to comment on the massacre,", "id": "22212632" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas the second-most senior apostle of the church after the death of Woodruff, Cannon did not become President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, as would be the practice in the LDS Church today. Rather, because Cannon was a member of the First Presidency, the church simply appointed the next senior apostle of the church—Brigham Young, Jr.—to be the quorum president. (Under today's practices, Cannon would have been appointed the president of the quorum and Young would have been appointed acting president.) Cannon", "id": "19825274" }, { "contents": "Clifford E. Young\n\n\nClifford Earle Young (December 7, 1883 – August 21, 1958) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1941 until his death. Young was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, the son of LDS Church leader Seymour B. Young. From 1905 to 1908, he served as a Mormon missionary in England and Germany. In 1928, Young became the president of the Alpine Stake of the LDS Church in Utah. In 1934, he joined the", "id": "8315768" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n33. Upon his joining the Quorum of the Twelve, Cannon was called to preside over the church's European Mission. Cannon's mission in Europe ended when he was recalled by Young in 1862 to work in Washington, D.C., to assist in the church's promotion of Utah Territory's bid for statehood. At the adjournment of the 1862 congressional session, Cannon again left for Europe to preside over the mission. In this capacity, Cannon was the editor of the \"Millennial Star\" and, for a short time,", "id": "19825271" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nfrom the federal authorities. In September 1888, Cannon surrendered himself and pleaded guilty at trial to charges of unlawful cohabitation under the Edmunds Act. As a result, Cannon served nearly six months in Utah's federal penitentiary. Cannon was pardoned in 1894 by U.S. President Grover Cleveland. Cannon died on April 12, 1901, in Monterey, California, at 74 years of age. Had he lived a few months longer, he would have become the President of the LDS Church: Lorenzo Snow died on October 10 of that year", "id": "19825280" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Isle of Man\n\n\nand Idaho which descends from the 19th century marriage of George Cannon and Ann Quayle before their emigration from Peel, Isle of Man. The family's most notable member was their oldest son George Quayle Cannon. The family is connected by marriage to the Bennion, Taylor, Wells and Young political families. LDS Membership statistics as of January 1, 2011 for the Isle of Man. The nation of the Isle of Man does not have its own mission. Instead it is served by an English mission. Five out of the six", "id": "7797107" }, { "contents": "The Contributor (LDS magazine)\n\n\nThe Contributor was an independent publication associated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) between 1879 and 1896. It was a monthly periodical and sought to represent the Young Men's and Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Associations (YMMIA and YLMIA respectively), the youth organizations of the LDS Church at the time. It was founded by Junius F. Wells, the inaugural head of the YMMIA. Abraham H. Cannon became editor when the magazine was purchased by the Cannon Publishing Company in 1892. With the", "id": "505110" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe official organ of the Sunday School until 1930, when it was replaced with \"The Instructor\". Cannon also served as the first general superintendent of the church's Sunday School from 1867 until his death. On April 8, 1873, Cannon became a member of the church's First Presidency when he was called as the first counselor by Brigham Young. Cannon went on to serve as counselor to three more presidents of the church: he was First Counselor to John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. Although Cannon", "id": "19825273" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\ntogether. Prior to her service in the general Primary presidency, Clara Cannon was a counselor in the presidencies of the Primary and Relief Society in the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. When Louie B. Felt became the first general presidency of the Primary, Matilda M. Barratt and Cannon were selected as Felt's counselors. Cannon was a counselor until 1895; the next year she was succeeded in the position by Josephine R. West. Clara Moses Cannon died of throat cancer in Centerville, Utah, aged 87 and was interred in", "id": "10663424" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nScouts of America and served in the organization's Great Salt Lake Council. Prior to his call as a general authority, Cannon served in the church as a bishop, stake president, patriarch, temple sealer, and regional representative. He was also the president of the church's Central British Mission from 1966 to 1969. From 1969 to 1972, Cannon was an assistant and counselor to W. Jay Eldredge, the general superintendent of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association. Cannon became a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy", "id": "8339580" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe Nauvoo Legion. During this time, Cannon served as printer of the \"Deseret News\" while it was publishing in exile in Fillmore, Utah. After the Utah War, he was called as president of the church's Eastern States Mission. The murder of Parley P. Pratt in 1857 created a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. That vacancy was not filled until Brigham Young called Cannon to the apostleship three years later. Cannon was ordained to the priesthood office of apostle on August 26, 1860, at age", "id": "19825270" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nin the Sandwich Islands (later known as the Kingdom of Hawaii), where he served for four years. While in the islands, Cannon converted many Native Hawaiians. One of the most notable was Jonatana Napela, who assisted Cannon in translating the Book of Mormon into Hawaiian. Joseph F. Smith, a future church president, would follow Cannon and serve in Hawaii one year later. Returning to Utah Territory, Cannon married Elizabeth Hoagland (daughter of Abraham Hoagland and his wife.) He was almost immediately called to assist apostle", "id": "19825268" }, { "contents": "Ronald E. Poelman\n\n\nRonald Eugene Poelman (May 10, 1928 – November 19, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 until his death. In 1984, he delivered a controversial sermon in the LDS Church's general conference which the church redacted before publishing. Poelman was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to a Latter-day Saint family. As a young man, he served as a Mormon missionary in the LDS Church's Netherlands Mission. He began his", "id": "4765396" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\n. He would marry Martha Brown of Ogden in 1878. In 1891 he helped to organize the Utah Republican Party. After a failed bid to become delegate from the Utah Territory, he succeeded and served from March 4, 1895, to January 4, 1896. Cannon was chosen in 1896 to serve as senator by the Utah Legislature in spite of LDS church leadership favoring his father for the job. He served in the United States Senate, initially, as a member of the Republican Party; however, he later became a", "id": "11000346" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nmember of the Silver Republican Party, founded by his successor (and future employer at \"The Salt Lake Tribune\") Thomas Kearns. Cannon lost re-election in 1899. Utah's state legislators indicated they would not support Cannon for re-election shortly after the November 1898 elections. Cannon had voted against the Dingley Act, which would have raised tariffs on sugar and helped the Utah sugar industry. It was strongly supported by the LDS Church hierarchy, who now opposed his re-election. Other factors were his support", "id": "11000347" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand Ghana. The first convert baptized in Africa was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and his wife were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' centre in Nauvoo, Illinois. For three months in 1989, Cannon was the interim president of the LDS Church's Germany Hamburg Mission; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. After his interim service as mission president, Cannon was the second president of the Frankfurt Germany Temple from 1989 to", "id": "9582827" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nCounselor to William B. Preston, the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church; he served in this position between 1884 and 1886. In 1884, shortly after Cannon had become a general authority, a sensationalized news story by Joseph Lippman in the \"Salt Lake Tribune\" alleged that Cannon had taken his wife's sister Louie Wells as a plural wife. Lippman suggested that Cannon and Wells had been married in the Logan Temple. In fact, there had been no such marriage, though it was later revealed that Cannon and Wells had", "id": "7202724" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nbranches of the LDS Church in Nigeria and Ghana. The first convert baptized in Nigeria was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and her husband were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' center in Nauvoo, Illinois. In 1989, they served as interim leaders of the Germany Hamburg Mission of the church; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. From 1989 to 1992, Cannon was the matron of the Frankfurt Germany Temple while her husband", "id": "9582966" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\n's Quorum of the Twelve. Abraham was a son of George Q. Cannon, an early member of the church's First Presidency. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary in the church's Central States Mission. After his mission, he served in the United States Air Force during the Second World War. In 1946, he began attending Brigham Young University (BYU). After graduating from BYU, Cannon became a vice president of Beneficial Life Insurance Company in Salt Lake City. He was active in the Boy", "id": "8339579" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\n1925, Cannon became the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church, succeeding Charles W. Nibley. Cannon's counselors were David A. Smith and John Wells. In 1938, Cannon was released as Presiding Bishop and was succeeded by LeGrand Richards. At the same time, Cannon was ordained an apostle and made an \"associate\" of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, a unique position that had never been filled before. When Quorum member Melvin J. Ballard died the next year, Cannon became a full member of the Quorum; he served", "id": "2194374" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\nClarissa Cordelia (\"Clara\") Moses Cannon (April 21, 1839 – August 21, 1926) was a Mormon pioneer and a member of the first-ever general presidency of the Primary organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). She was the second counselor to general president Louie B. Felt from 1880 to 1895. Clara Moses was born in Westfield, Massachusetts. In 1846 she took the six-month journey on the ship \"Brooklyn\" from New York City to San", "id": "10663422" }, { "contents": "Leonora Cannon Taylor\n\n\nLeonora Cannon Taylor (October 6, 1796–December 9, 1868) was a member of the Relief Society organization at the time of its origin and the first wife of John Taylor, the third president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). On October 6, 1796 in Peel, Isle of Man, Leonora Cannon was born to George Cannon and Leonora Callister. As the oldest daughter in the family, when Leonora's father died when she was thirteen she went away to London to work", "id": "16190675" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\ntheir books, which were then distributed by others. However, Cannon & Sons distributed several important books through their stores and mail order (see table). The company had extensive ties to the LDS Church-owned newspaper, the \"Deseret News.\" Five of Cannon's sons held important positions in the paper, and Cannon himself was editor between 1867 and 1872, and again while temporarily owning the paper from 1892 to 1898. Nearly every George Q. Cannon & Sons book was printed on the \"Deseret News\" press", "id": "18344086" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nof the Utah Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Cannon was the oldest son of George Q. Cannon and the one most expected to follow in his prominent father's footsteps in politics, church office, and journalism. Heber J. Grant once said of Cannon: \"There probably is not a young man in the church who had had more opportunities and advantages extended to him educationally, spiritually, and every other way than John Q. Cannon.\" At the age of 27, Cannon was called to serve as the Second", "id": "7202723" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nMartha Maria \"Mattie\" Hughes Cannon (July 1, 1857 – July 10, 1932) was a Welsh-born immigrant to the United States, a polygamous wife, physician, Utah women's rights advocate and suffragist, and Utah State Senator. Her family immigrated to the United States as converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and traveled West to settle in Utah territory with other Mormons. She started working at the age of fourteen. At sixteen she enrolled in the University", "id": "15993465" }, { "contents": "Church Office Building\n\n\nThe Church Office Building is a 28-story building in Salt Lake City, Utah, which houses the administrative support staff for the lay ministry of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) throughout the world. The building is 420 ft (128 m) tall at roof level and is located within the Temple Square complex on the corner of North Temple and State Street. The building was designed by George Cannon Young at a cost of US$31 million to build. Construction took place from 1962 to 1972", "id": "13754819" }, { "contents": "John Lyman Smith\n\n\nJohn Lyman Smith (November 17, 1828 – February 21, 1898) was an American politician and Mormon missionary. He served as a member of the Utah Territory's Legislative Assembly's House of Representatives for Iron County, Utah, from 1852 to 1853, and the Great Salt Lake County, Utah, from 1853 to 1855. Cousin of the founder of the Latter Day Saint Movement, Joseph Smith, Smith was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) who traveled to the", "id": "18219861" }, { "contents": "Francis M. Lyman\n\n\nFrancis Marion Lyman (January 12, 1840 – November 18, 1916) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was the President of the Quorum from 1903 until his death. Lyman's father and son were also apostles in the church: his father was Amasa M. Lyman and his son was Richard R. Lyman. Both his father and son were excommunicated from the church while serving as apostles. Francis M. Lyman was born as", "id": "20761093" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nAngus Munn Cannon (May 17, 1834 – June 7, 1915) was an early Latter Day Saint leader and Mormon pioneer. Cannon was born in Liverpool, Lancashire, England. His Manx parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 1840, being baptized by his uncle John Taylor. In 1842, the Cannon family went to Nauvoo, Illinois, United States. By 1849, they were in Utah Territory. Cannon was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon and their lives followed very similar paths up", "id": "7202650" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\naffairs while Taylor recovered. This training would serve him well in later life. Cannon's father died in 1845. In 1846, Taylor traveled to England to organize the affairs of the church after Smith's death. Meanwhile, Cannon accompanied Taylor's wife and family as they moved to Winter Quarters, Nebraska. When Taylor returned, Cannon traveled with the entire Taylor family to the Salt Lake Valley, arriving in October 1847. In 1849, Cannon was asked by church president Brigham Young to serve as a missionary for the church", "id": "19825267" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nstaying in the position until December 31, 1903. Cannon attempted to prohibit children not vaccinated from attending school in case of a disease outbreak. The Board of Health sent out vaccines; however, the \"Deseret News\" spread information that vaccines weren't safe. LDS Church leaders were divided on the subject. One apostle, Brigham Young Jr. was very vocal in his opinions, writing in the \"Deseret News\" about the evils of vaccinations. The influence of the \"Deseret News\" and Mormon religious leaders limited how many", "id": "15993490" }, { "contents": "Billy Johnson (Mormon)\n\n\nLDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball announced Official Declaration 2 which extended the priesthood to all worthy male members of the church regardless of race or color. In gratitude, Johnson sent a letter to Kimball, explaining that God had prepared the people in Ghana, asking him to send missionaries to the members. Kimball responded to his pleas and sent the first called missionaries Rendell N. Mabey and Rachel Mabey. They joined Edwin Q. Cannon and Janath R. Cannon. Johnson was finally baptized into the LDS Church on December 9, 1978. He", "id": "4108521" }, { "contents": "Juvenile Instructor\n\n\ncatechisms on the Bible, Book of Mormon, and Doctrine and Covenants; musical compositions; illustrations; stories; editorial teachings; and other aids to gospel instruction. It was the first magazine for children published in the United States west of the Mississippi River. For much of its history, \"The Juvenile Instructor\" was owned by the Cannon family. Its first editor was George Q. Cannon, an apostle in the LDS Church. Cannon and his family continued to publish the magazine privately until January 1, 1901, when the", "id": "9210614" }, { "contents": "Joseph F. Smith\n\n\nand as second counselor to Lorenzo Snow (1898–1901). Smith was appointed first counselor to Snow on the death of first counselor George Q. Cannon, but, as Snow himself died only four days later, Smith never served in that position. He succeeded Snow as president of the LDS Church and president of the Salt Lake Temple. He served as president of the temple until 1911, when he transferred the responsibility to Anthon H. Lund. Smith also served as editor of the \"Improvement Era\" and \"Juvenile Instructor\",", "id": "4117444" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in California\n\n\nQ. Cannon began publication in San Francisco of the \"Western Standard\", a weekly periodical supportive of the Church. The first colonization from Utah to California came in 1851 when a company of about 450 saints and slaves under direction of Elders Amasa M. Lyman and Charles C. Rich of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles settled at what is now San Bernardino. The colony was the final settlement in a string of Mormon communities extending from Salt Lake City in an area known as Deseret. The community thrived, and on July 6,", "id": "22187256" }, { "contents": "Sunday School (LDS Church)\n\n\nout. On November 11, 1867, Young and church leaders Daniel H. Wells, George A. Smith, Wilford Woodruff, George Q. Cannon, and Brigham Young, Jr. met and organized the Parent Sunday School Union. Young appointed Cannon as the first general superintendent of the Sunday School, a position he would hold until his death in 1901. In 1872, the Sunday School organization was renamed the Deseret Sunday School Union. The organized Sunday School addressed lesson topics and source materials, grading, prizes and rewards, use of hymns", "id": "8671425" }, { "contents": "Hugh W. Pinnock\n\n\nHugh Wallace Pinnock (January 15, 1934 – December 16, 2000) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Pinnock was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Western States Mission. Pinnock graduated from University of Utah in 1958, where he became a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity and Owl and Key. Prior to his call to the First", "id": "8519001" }, { "contents": "Charles W. Penrose\n\n\nwas organized Penrose was called as a member of the high council. In 1877, Penrose became the assistant editor of the LDS Church-owned \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, working under George Q. Cannon. Penrose was known for his writing, including missionary tracts and lyrics of Latter-day Saint hymns, including \"God of Our Fathers\", \"O Ye Mountains High\", and \"Up, Awake, Ye Defenders of Zion\". In 1880, Penrose became the editor-in-chief of", "id": "2194239" }, { "contents": "Rulon S. Wells\n\n\nRulon Seymour Wells (July 7, 1854 – May 7, 1941) was a Utah politician and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1893 until his death. Wells was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to LDS Church leader Daniel H. Wells (1814–1891) and Louisa Free (1824–1886). In 1875, Wells travelled to Europe as a Mormon missionary and worked primarily in Germany and Switzerland. He returned to the United States in 1877. On", "id": "8315459" }, { "contents": "G. Homer Durham\n\n\nGeorge Homer Durham (February 4, 1911 – January 10, 1985) was an American academic administrator and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Durham was born in Parowan, Utah, and was raised in Salt Lake City. As a boy in grade school, he met and became lifelong friends with future LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley. As a young man, Durham served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the British", "id": "21588256" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nJonatana Napela or Jonathan Hawaii Napela (first name also spelled Iohatana, full name Napelakapuonamahanaonaleleonalani) (September 11, 1813 – August 6, 1879) was one of the earliest Hawaiian converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Hawaii, joining in the 1830s. He helped translate the Book of Mormon into the Hawaiian language, as \"Ka Buke a Moramona,\" working with missionary George Q. Cannon. Napela was appointed to serve as a superintendent of the colony at Kalaupapa, Molokai", "id": "16647246" }, { "contents": "Richfield, Utah\n\n\nserves about 600 students per year. As in most settled areas of rural Utah, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) plays a prominent role. The Mormons were highly industrious colonizers. From 1847, when they founded Salt Lake City, until 1877, they founded 360 towns. Following direction from Brigham Young, Latter-day Saints founded the town and outlying hamlets about 150 years ago. Members of the LDS Church are predominant among the residents. Even in this heart of Mormon country,", "id": "11082836" }, { "contents": "Marvin O. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Owen Ashton (April 8, 1883 – October 7, 1946) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1938 until his death. Prior to becoming a general authority, Ashton was a prominent local leader of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City, Utah. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Mormon parents. He married Rachel Grace Jeremy in 1906 and in 1907 went to England as a missionary for the LDS Church. He returned", "id": "14505232" }, { "contents": "LeGrand Richards\n\n\nLeGrand Richards (February 6, 1886 – January 11, 1983) was a prominent missionary and leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He served as the seventh presiding bishop of the LDS Church from 1938 to 1952, and was then called as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles by church president David O. McKay. Richards served in the Quorum of the Twelve until his death in Salt Lake City, Utah, at the age of 96. Richards was born in", "id": "2294374" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nwas educated at Lahainaluna School. Napela was trained as a lawyer. He was serving as a judge in Wailuku, Hawaii, when he met American George Q. Cannon, a member of the LDS Church on a missionary trip to Hawaii. After Napela's conversion in the 1830s to the LDS Church, the government forced the judge to resign from his position. The LDS Church was regarded with suspicion. LDS Church historian Andrew Jensen said that Napela \"did splendid missionary work for the Church.\" Napela was sent on a specific", "id": "16647248" }, { "contents": "Gardo House\n\n\ncounselor George Q. Cannon and other church leaders suggested that Taylor occupy the Gardo House after its completion, but he repeatedly refused. However, when church members unanimously voted on April 9, 1879, to make the Gardo House the official parsonage for LDS Church presidents, Taylor reluctantly accepted their decision. Moses Thatcher, William Jennings, and Angus M. Cannon were appointed as a committee to oversee completion of the mansion. On December 27, 1881, the Deseret News published a letter from John Taylor announcing a public reception and tour of", "id": "1496184" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nStates Mission of the church in 1901. In 1902, Grant married George J. Cannon. In 1923, Cannon was asked to succeed Mae Taylor Nystrom as the second counselor to Martha Horne Tingey, the general president of what was then called the Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Association. In 1929, when Ruth May Fox succeeded Tingey, Cannon was asked to be her first counselor. Cannon served in this capacity until 1929, when Fox was released and Cannon was selected by her father, who was President of the Church, to", "id": "1681854" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\n. (At the time, Cannon was a counselor to James E. Faust in the church's International Mission, which had jurisdiction over all areas of the world not otherwise part of a mission.) After Bateman and Cannon reported the results of their trip, Cannon and his wife were called and set apart as the first Mormon missionaries to black Africa. They—along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey—preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 35 branches and 5 districts of the LDS Church in Nigeria", "id": "9582826" }, { "contents": "Marion D. Hanks\n\n\nMarion Duff Hanks (October 13, 1921 – August 5, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1953 until his death. Hanks was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man he served in the Northern States Mission of the LDS Church, which was headquartered in Chicago. He was in the United States Navy during World War II and received a J.D. from the University of Utah. Prior to his call as a general authority", "id": "6558935" }, { "contents": "Lillie T. Freeze\n\n\nthe Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association (YLMIA). In this capacity, she was invited to speak at the Salt Lake Tabernacle on April 6, 1880, at a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the LDS Church's founding. In 1880, Lillie Freeze was one of the founding members of the LDS Church's Primary Association. Freeze was appointed as the first secretary of the general presidency, which was composed of Louie B. Felt, Matilda M. Barratt, and Clara C. M. Cannon. Freeze was secretary until 1888, when", "id": "10906695" }, { "contents": "Henry D. Taylor\n\n\nHenry Dixon Taylor (November 22, 1903 – February 24, 1987) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1958 until his death. Taylor was born in Provo, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Eastern States Mission. During his mission, Taylor was the president of the church's Connecticut District. Taylor received a bachelor's degree from Brigham Young University (BYU) and a master's degree", "id": "2477100" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas elected to be the non-voting delegate for Utah Territory in the United States Congress in 1872. He remained a congressional delegate until 1882, when his seat was declared vacant by the enactment of the Edmunds Act, which terminated many political and civil rights for Utah's Mormon polygamists. By 1880, Cannon had served four terms in Congress as Territorial Delegate. The newly appointed anti-Mormon territorial governor, Eli Houston Murray, openly supported the Liberal Party, which generally opposed church candidates. The 1880 territory-wide election", "id": "19825275" }, { "contents": "George F. Richards\n\n\nGeorge Franklin Richards (February 23, 1861 – August 8, 1950) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from April 9, 1906 until his death. He also served as Acting Presiding Patriarch of the LDS Church from 1937 to 1942 and President of the Quorum of the Twelve from May 25, 1945 until his death. Richards was born in Farmington, Utah Territory, the son of Franklin D. Richards and Nanny Longstroth. Richards", "id": "2194252" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\n1882, at the age of 23, Cannon assumed business control of the \"Juvenile Instructor\" and associated publications. He continued his management until his death. In October 1892, Cannon and his brother John Q. Cannon took control of the \"Deseret News\" publishing. He also became the editor and publisher of \"The Contributor\". On October 9, 1882, Cannon became a member of the First Seven Presidents of the Seventy of the church. On October 7, 1889, church president Wilford Woodruff named Cannon a member", "id": "9035316" }, { "contents": "Howard Cannon\n\n\nHis grandfather David Cannon, was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon, and a leading figure in the building of the St. George Temple, who was later the third president of that temple. His father Walter Cannon was one of David Cannon's 31 children. Howard's parents had married in 1909, his mother was Leah Sullivan. When Cannon was two years old his father left for England to served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for two years. Cannon went to Woodward School in", "id": "18060013" }, { "contents": "Mormon fiction\n\n\nMormons were generally non-fiction, including scripture, missionary tracts, and doctrinal literature. In 1844, Parley P. Pratt published what is commonly cited as the first work of LDS fiction, the didactic \"Dialogue between Joseph Smith and the Devil\". It was first published in the New York Herald. Early Mormon leaders like Brigham Young and George Q. Cannon condemned novels for wasting time, a rhetoric that persisted until the 1880s. Fiction among LDS Church members developed once the Mormons had settled in Utah and developed a degree of", "id": "453087" }, { "contents": "Marvin J. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Jeremy Ashton (May 6, 1915 – February 25, 1994) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1971 until his death. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was the son of Marvin O. Ashton, a local LDS leader, who later became a church general authority. The younger Ashton worked in the lumber business as a youth. He graduated from the University of Utah. He served a", "id": "19825413" }, { "contents": "Rudger Clawson\n\n\nRudger Judd Clawson (March 12, 1857 – June 21, 1943) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1898 until his death in 1943. He also served as President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1921 until his death and as a member of the First Presidency of the LDS Church for five days in 1901. Clawson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to Hiram Bradley Clawson and Margaret Judd", "id": "9035430" }, { "contents": "Utah-Idaho Sugar Company\n\n\npayment and a $130,000 loan. Cutler also went to Chicago and New York City to secure loans from banks; he came back, via train, with a bag full of money, as he did not think any banks in Utah could have cashed the large bank draft. The LDS church made more payments and secured more loans. In addition, George Q. Cannon and Heber J. Grant personally funded the enterprise. Joseph F. Smith, president of the LDS Church, gave a sermon in 1893 explaining that this was done to", "id": "1319991" }, { "contents": "President of the Church (LDS Church)\n\n\nthe President of the Quorum. When Woodruff died, his counselors returned to the Quorum based on the date they were ordained an apostle, placing George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith below Brigham Young Jr. and John Willard Young. Heber J. Grant objected to that arguing that seniority should be based on ordination to the Quorum rather than ordination as an apostle. Young argued that an apostle should not be demoted as long as he is worthy of the position. On March 31, 1900, Snow met with his counselors, Cannon and", "id": "16343191" }, { "contents": "Alfred W. McCune\n\n\n. Judge Orlando Powers, Associate Justice of the Utah Supreme Court, said in 1906 that he understood that McCune was not a Mormon. Frank J. Cannon, too, claimed McCune was not a Mormon, and B. H. Roberts, LDS Church historian and member of the First Council of the Seventy, said in 1930 that McCune was not a church member. Historian Orvin Malmquist, however, says that church records show he was baptized into the LDS Church at the age of eight in 1857, and that his marriage to Elizabeth", "id": "15062757" } ]
Joseph Jenne Cannon ( May 22 , 1877 -- November 5 , 1945 ) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ( LDS Church ) . He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family . As a young man , Cannon served as a for the LDS Church in Europe . He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903 . Lyman and Cannon also similarly dedicated Finland in 1903 . In the 1908 election , Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from . He served one term , from 1909 to 1911 . Cannon was not formally associated with any political party . From 1931 to 1934 , Cannon was the editor of the Deseret News , a [START_ENT] Salt Lake City [END_ENT] newspaper owned by the LDS Church . His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church 's British Mission . Cannon served in this capacity for three years , until 1937 . Immediately following his return to Utah , Cannon was asked to become the first assistant to George Q. Morris , the general superintendent of the church 's . Cannon served in this capacity until his death from pancreatic cancer
1efca56b-1771-42bb-869c-4416dc2f5c6c_Joseph_J._Canno:12
[{"answer": "Salt Lake City", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "53837", "title": "Salt Lake City"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nJoseph Jenne Cannon (May 22, 1877 – November 5, 1945) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Europe. He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in St. Petersburg and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903. Lyman and Cannon", "id": "13710370" }, { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nalso similarly dedicated Finland in 1903. In the 1908 election, Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. He served one term, from 1909 to 1911. Cannon was not formally associated with any political party. From 1931 to 1934, Cannon was the editor of the \"Deseret News\", a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church. His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church's British Mission. Cannon served in this", "id": "13710371" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nSylvester Quayle Cannon (June 10, 1877 – May 29, 1943) was an American businessman, engineer, and religious leader who served as the sixth presiding bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1925 to 1938 and a member of church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1939 until his death. He was the son of George Q. Cannon, an apostle and member of the church's First Presidency. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. He studied", "id": "2194372" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nJohn Quayle Cannon (April 19, 1857 – January 14, 1931) was an editor-in-chief of the \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, Utah, and a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He also served as a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army during the Spanish–American War. He was the son of LDS Church apostle George Q. Cannon and Elizabeth Hoagland. He was married to Elizabeth \"Annie\" Wells Cannon. Cannon", "id": "7202721" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nFrank Jenne Cannon (January 25, 1859July 25, 1933) was the first United States Senator from Utah, who served from 1896 to 1899. Born in Salt Lake City, he was the eldest child of Sarah Jenne Cannon and George Q. Cannon. His father was an Apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and later was a member of its First Presidency. After attending the school in Salt Lake City, he studied at University of Deseret, graduating at the age of 19", "id": "11000345" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nEdwin Quayle \"Ted\" Cannon, Jr. (May 6, 1918 – April 6, 2005) was a Utah politician and businessman and was a prominent leader and missionary in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was among the first missionaries in the LDS Church to preach to black people in Africa and was part of the first group missionaries sent to establish official congregations of the LDS Church in West Africa. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Edwin Q. Cannon,", "id": "9582822" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Ivins Cannon (March 9, 1920 – August 4, 2009) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1986 to 1991. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, Cannon was the son of George J. Cannon and Lucy Grant Cannon, a leader of the youth in the LDS Church. His maternal grandfather was Heber J. Grant, the seventh president of the LDS Church. His paternal grandfather was Abraham H. Cannon, who was a member of the church", "id": "8339578" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nLucy Grant Cannon (October 22, 1880 – May 7, 1966) was the fourth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1937 to 1948. She was a member of the general presidency of the Young Women from 1923 to 1948, serving as a counselor to two presidents. Lucy Grant was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Lucy Stringham and LDS Church apostle Heber J. Grant. She served as a church missionary in the Western", "id": "1681853" }, { "contents": "George Mousley Cannon\n\n\nTrust Company. He served as a delegate to the 1895 Utah State Constitutional Convention and chaired the committee which formulated the articles on taxation and public debt. In 1896, Cannon was elected to the Utah State Senate and served as its first president. When The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) modified stake boundaries in 1900, dividing the new Granite Stake off from the Salt Lake Stake, Cannon became the Sunday School Superintendent of the new stake. From 1901 until after 1930, Cannon served as", "id": "8629874" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nat the University of Utah and then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received a B.S. degree in mining engineering. In 1899, Cannon began an LDS Church mission in Belgium. Cannon then served from 1900 to 1902 as president of the church's Netherlands–Belgium Mission. Cannon also served as Francis M. Lyman's secretary on a three-month trip to many nations along the Mediterranean and in the Middle East. From 1916 to 1925, Cannon served as president of the Pioneer Stake in Salt Lake City. In", "id": "2194373" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\nAbraham Hoagland Cannon (also reported as Abram H. Cannon) (March 12, 1859 – July 19, 1896) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. His parents were George Q. Cannon, a Latter Day Saints apostle, and Elizabeth Hoagland, daughter of Abraham Hoagland. Cannon studied at Deseret University. Later, he studied architecture under Obed Taylor. Cannon married Sarah A.", "id": "9035314" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nSr. and Luella Wareing. He was born at his parents' home because of the 1918 influenza pandemic. Cannon's paternal grandfather was George Q. Cannon, a Mormon pioneer and prominent leader in the LDS Church. Cannon was raised in Salt Lake City. In 1937, Cannon went on a mission for the LDS Church to Nazi Germany. He was president of a branch of the church in Berlin in 1939 when the LDS Church evacuated its missionaries from Europe at the beginning of World War II. Cannon finished his mission in", "id": "9582823" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\n. Callville was submerged when Lake Mead was filled. In 1869 and 1870, Cannon served a second mission in the Eastern United States. In April 1876, Cannon became president of the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. He served in this position until April 1, 1904. After his time as stake president, Cannon served as a patriarch in the church. Cannon was the mayor of St. George, Utah Territory in 1861 and 1862. In 1896, after Utah had become a U.S. state, he stood for election", "id": "7202652" }, { "contents": "Donald Q. Cannon\n\n\nDonald Quayle Cannon (born 1936) is a retired professor at Brigham Young University who specializes in Mormon history, particularly early Mormon history and international Mormon history. As a young man, Cannon was a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Germany. Cannon earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Utah. Cannon holds a Ph.D. from Clark University. In the late 1960s, he taught at the University of Southern Maine. In the LDS Church he has", "id": "10057919" }, { "contents": "George Goddard (Mormon)\n\n\nwas the clerk to LDS Church presiding bishop Edward Hunter. From 1874 to 1884, Goddard was the clerk of the LDS Church's biannual general conferences. In 1872, Goddard became the inaugural first assistant to George Q. Cannon, the first superintendent of the Deseret Sunday School Union. Goddard served in this capacity for 26 years, until his death in 1899. Goddard was also a member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and a patriarch in the church. He died in Salt Lake City and was buried at Salt Lake City Cemetery.", "id": "7701639" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nuntil their arrival in Utah. In 1854, Cannon went on a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to the Eastern United States, where he assisted John Taylor in publishing a periodical entitled \"The Mormon\". He also preached and baptized in Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware. Cannon returned to Utah Territory due to the troubles connected with the Utah War. In 1864, Cannon helped establish Call's Landing on the Colorado River, later known as Callville, Nevada", "id": "7202651" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nJanath Russell Cannon (October 28, 1918 – July 5, 2007) was a counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was also a prominent missionary in the church and was among the first to preach to black people in Africa. Born in Ogden, Utah, Janath Russell was educated at Wellesley College. In 1941, she married Edwin Q. Cannon in the Salt Lake Temple. From 1971 to 1974,", "id": "9582964" }, { "contents": "Joseph A. Cannon\n\n\nserved as an assistant administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from 1983 to 1985. Joseph A. Cannon was born on July 31, 1949. Cannon served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Ireland, including on the Isle of Man, the ancestral homeland of the Cannons. Cannon received a degree in political science and, in 1977, a law degree from Brigham Young University. Cannon served as a law clerk in Salt Lake City for U.S. District", "id": "7202830" }, { "contents": "Elaine A. Cannon\n\n\nElaine Anderson Cannon (April 9, 1922 – May 19, 2003) was the eighth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 to 1984. Cannon has been a writer and an editor and is the author of over 50 books. Elaine Anderson was born to Aldon Joseph and Minnie Egan Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a teenager, she started writing a daily column aimed at teenagers for the \"Deseret News\". She", "id": "1682052" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nAdele Morris Cannon Howells (January 11, 1886 – April 14, 1951) was the fourth general president of the Primary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1943 until her death of rheumatic heart disease. She contributed to \"The Children's Friend\" magazine, as well as the fundraising for the Children's Primary Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. Adele Morris Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to George Mousley Cannon and Marian Adelaide Morris. She", "id": "1336419" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\nGeorgius Young Cannon (March 6, 1892 – March 29, 1987) was a 20th-century architect in the American West who operated principally out of Salt Lake City, Utah. Cannon trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), graduating in 1918. He then joined the army and later returned to Utah to intern with the architectural firm Ware & Treganza and Cannon & Fetzer. He served two missions to Germany for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). For a time", "id": "12786285" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Quayle Cannon (January 11, 1827 – April 12, 1901) was an early member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), and served in the First Presidency under four successive presidents of the church: Brigham Young, John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. He was the church's chief political strategist, and was dubbed \"the Mormon premier\" and \"the Mormon Richelieu\" by the press. He was also a five", "id": "19825263" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nwas the oldest of nine children, and her father George Cannon was the first president of the Utah State Senate. As a child, Cannon suffered from rheumatic fever. She enjoyed reading in her spare time and horseback riding. She was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Cannon attended schools in Salt Lake City and graduated from the LDS High School and Business College in 1903. She attended the University of Utah and studied physical education and graduated with her bachelor's degree in 1909. Cannon", "id": "1336420" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nis one of the few general authorities of the LDS Church to have been excommunicated. From 1889 until 1892, Cannon was the editor of the \"Ogden Standard\". From October 1892 until April 1898, he was the editor in chief of the \"Deseret News\". After the Spanish–American War he returned to work at the \"Deseret News\" and served as an executive editor of the newspaper off-and-on until his death. He was much beloved by his co-workers. Cannon was a member", "id": "7202722" }, { "contents": "Tracy Y. Cannon\n\n\nLatter-day Saints. In 1939, he was made second assistant to Melvin J. Ballard, supervisor of the committee. From 1915 to 1927, Cannon was a member of the high council of the Pioneer Stake of the LDS Church. In 1917, he became a member of the Deseret Sunday School Union General Board. From 1930 through 1936, Cannon was bishop of the Cannon Ward in Salt Lake City. Cannon was an editor of the 1927 LDS Church hymnal. In 1925, Cannon was appointed director of the McCune School", "id": "12019030" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe church's Welsh-language periodical, \"Udgorn Seion\". From 1867 to 1874, Cannon was the managing editor of the \"Deseret News\". It was under his direction that the newspaper was first published on a daily basis. In 1866, Cannon began publication of a magazine for youth and young adult Latter-day Saints called \"The Juvenile Instructor\". He owned and published this magazine until his death; in 1901 his family sold the magazine to the LDS Church's Sunday School organization. The periodical was", "id": "19825272" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nCannon and her husband were heads of the Switzerland Mission of the LDS Church. Upon their return to Utah in 1974, Cannon became the first counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the church's Relief Society. Cannon served in this capacity until 1978, when she was released so that she and her husband could become the first missionaries of the church to preach in \"black Africa\". They — along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey — preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 27", "id": "9582965" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\nan LDS Church organization responsible for educating young members of the LDS church, and the magazine was the first church periodical oriented toward youth. Cannon opened the George Q. Cannon & Sons bookstore in 1867 to sell the magazine and other publications of an uplifting nature. Cannon believed that secular novels did not reflect Latter-day Saint values. In the 1880s, Cannon expanded with a branch in Ogden, Utah. It is not known how many books Cannon & Sons actually published itself. In this era, authors commonly self-published", "id": "18344085" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n. Cannon was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. Cannon fathered 32 children, some of whom are Abraham H. Cannon, John Q. Cannon, and Sylvester Q. Cannon, who all became general authorities of the LDS Church; Frank J. Cannon, Utah's first U.S. Senator; and Lewis T. Cannon and Georgius Y. Cannon, prominent architects in Utah. Some of Cannon's prominent descendants include Howard Cannon, U.S. Senator from Nevada from 1959 to 1983 and Chris Cannon, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1997 to", "id": "19825281" }, { "contents": "Salt Lake City Council Hall\n\n\nwho was then the official architect for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Built at First South and 120 East (more on Salt Lake City's coordinate system), sandstone for the structure was delivered from Red Butte Canyon on Utah's first chartered railroad. The well-furnished Greek revival building was completed at a cost of $70,000. In January 1866, City Hall was dedicated by George Q. Cannon, a prominent LDS leader. Many other LDS leaders attended the dedication including Brigham", "id": "19382830" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\n, Cannon moved to Los Angeles and worked as the office manager of his MIT schoolmate Wallace Neff. He later returned to Utah and designed numerous buildings, mostly residences, and some of which remain on the National Register of Historic Places. Among his works were meetinghouses of the LDS Church and other civic buildings. Cannon served on a church-appointed board of six architects that oversaw the construction of the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple. Cannon was the youngest of 32 children born to LDS Church leader George Q. Cannon. His mother,", "id": "12786286" }, { "contents": "Karl G. Maeser\n\n\nin the General Superintendency of the Deseret Sunday School Union. He was the Second Assistant to General Superintendent George Q. Cannon from July 1894 to January 1899. He then served as the First Assistant to Cannon from January 1899 until February 1901. Maeser also participated in the Utah constitutional convention after Abraham Smoot's death in 1895. He proposed an article to support prohibition, but later backed down. Missionaries from the LDS Church were removed from California in 1858 due to the Utah War. Missionary work resumed in 1892. Maeser presided over", "id": "11030473" }, { "contents": "Frank B. Woodbury\n\n\nFrank Bartlett Woodbury (December 27, 1867 – December 21, 1962) was a leader of and an Acting Presiding Patriarch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), one of only three church members to hold this position in church history. Born in St. George, Utah Territory, to Orin Nelson Woodbury and Ann Cannon, Woodbury served in many capacities in the church on a local level. Some, but not all, LDS Church sources list Woodbury as \"Acting Presiding Patriarch\" of", "id": "8238754" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand 1958 and served three full terms. From 1964 to 1971, Cannon was a bishop of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. From 1971 to 1974, he was the president of the Switzerland Mission of the church. In 1978, three weeks after the LDS Church announced that it would no longer impose restrictions of black people receiving the priesthood or participating in temple ordinances, Cannon traveled to Africa on behalf of the church with Merrill J. Bateman to assess the prospects for church missionary work and growth in \"black Africa\"", "id": "9582825" }, { "contents": "Amasa Lyman\n\n\n). Lyman served as the first mayor of San Bernardino. In 1860, Young appointed three of the twelve apostles—Lyman, Charles C. Rich, and George Q. Cannon—to the presidency of the church's European Mission. On March 16, 1862, Lyman preached a sermon in Dundee, Scotland, which all but denied the reality of and the necessity for the atonement of Jesus Christ, which is a central tenet of the LDS Church. His speech appeared to have been overlooked for years, but on January 21", "id": "12068047" }, { "contents": "Mark E. Petersen\n\n\nMark Edward Petersen (November 7, 1900 – January 11, 1984) was an American news editor and religious leader who served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1944 until his death. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, he filled the vacancy in the Quorum caused by the excommunication of Richard R. Lyman. Petersen had become managing editor of the church-owned \"Deseret News\" in 1935 and editor in 1941.", "id": "2692480" }, { "contents": "Thomas C. Griggs\n\n\nthe LDS Church's Aaronic priesthood; his call to this office was given by Apostle George Q. Cannon. With the outbreak of the American Civil War, the Griggs heeded the counsel of LDS Church leaders to move to Utah Territory. The Griggs crossed the plains in Joseph Horne's Mormon pioneer company in 1861. Griggs first joined the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in 1866 when Charles John Thomas was the director. Griggs would continue as a member of the choir until his death in 1903. While Robert Sands was the conductor of the choir", "id": "9481149" }, { "contents": "Charles Clarence Neslen\n\n\nfrom Germany and he was imprisoned in Danzig. He served as president of the Königsberg District of the LDS Church for a part of his mission. Neslen was a member of the Democratic Party and a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1912. Neslen worked a total of 15 years for the \"Deseret News\". He was also a realtor and for a time served as secretary of the Salt Lake Real Estate Association. On October 26, 1905, Neslen married Grace T. Cannon, a daughter of George Q. Cannon.", "id": "21092533" }, { "contents": "Stephen L. Chipman\n\n\nStephen L. Chipman (1864–1945) was a member of the Utah State Legislature in 1903 and a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Utah County. He was also the first president of the Salt Lake Temple who was not also an apostle in the LDS Church. Chipman studied at Brigham Young Academy (the predecessor of Brigham Young University (BYU)) as a youth. From 1885 to 1887 he served as a Mormon missionary in the Southern States Mission of the LDS Church", "id": "15228384" }, { "contents": "Mountain Meadows massacre and Mormon public relations\n\n\nCannon, then president of the LDS California Mission. In the October 13, 1857 edition of Cannon's San Francisco newspaper \"The Western Standard\", Cannon responded to initial news reports of involvement by Mormons by charging the responsible journalists with writing \"reckless and malignant slanders\", despite knowing that the southern Utah Mormons were \"as innocent of [the massacre] as the child unborn\". The church's official newspaper in Salt Lake City, \"The Deseret News\", was initially slow to comment on the massacre,", "id": "22212632" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas the second-most senior apostle of the church after the death of Woodruff, Cannon did not become President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, as would be the practice in the LDS Church today. Rather, because Cannon was a member of the First Presidency, the church simply appointed the next senior apostle of the church—Brigham Young, Jr.—to be the quorum president. (Under today's practices, Cannon would have been appointed the president of the quorum and Young would have been appointed acting president.) Cannon", "id": "19825274" }, { "contents": "Clifford E. Young\n\n\nClifford Earle Young (December 7, 1883 – August 21, 1958) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1941 until his death. Young was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, the son of LDS Church leader Seymour B. Young. From 1905 to 1908, he served as a Mormon missionary in England and Germany. In 1928, Young became the president of the Alpine Stake of the LDS Church in Utah. In 1934, he joined the", "id": "8315768" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n33. Upon his joining the Quorum of the Twelve, Cannon was called to preside over the church's European Mission. Cannon's mission in Europe ended when he was recalled by Young in 1862 to work in Washington, D.C., to assist in the church's promotion of Utah Territory's bid for statehood. At the adjournment of the 1862 congressional session, Cannon again left for Europe to preside over the mission. In this capacity, Cannon was the editor of the \"Millennial Star\" and, for a short time,", "id": "19825271" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nfrom the federal authorities. In September 1888, Cannon surrendered himself and pleaded guilty at trial to charges of unlawful cohabitation under the Edmunds Act. As a result, Cannon served nearly six months in Utah's federal penitentiary. Cannon was pardoned in 1894 by U.S. President Grover Cleveland. Cannon died on April 12, 1901, in Monterey, California, at 74 years of age. Had he lived a few months longer, he would have become the President of the LDS Church: Lorenzo Snow died on October 10 of that year", "id": "19825280" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Isle of Man\n\n\nand Idaho which descends from the 19th century marriage of George Cannon and Ann Quayle before their emigration from Peel, Isle of Man. The family's most notable member was their oldest son George Quayle Cannon. The family is connected by marriage to the Bennion, Taylor, Wells and Young political families. LDS Membership statistics as of January 1, 2011 for the Isle of Man. The nation of the Isle of Man does not have its own mission. Instead it is served by an English mission. Five out of the six", "id": "7797107" }, { "contents": "The Contributor (LDS magazine)\n\n\nThe Contributor was an independent publication associated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) between 1879 and 1896. It was a monthly periodical and sought to represent the Young Men's and Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Associations (YMMIA and YLMIA respectively), the youth organizations of the LDS Church at the time. It was founded by Junius F. Wells, the inaugural head of the YMMIA. Abraham H. Cannon became editor when the magazine was purchased by the Cannon Publishing Company in 1892. With the", "id": "505110" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe official organ of the Sunday School until 1930, when it was replaced with \"The Instructor\". Cannon also served as the first general superintendent of the church's Sunday School from 1867 until his death. On April 8, 1873, Cannon became a member of the church's First Presidency when he was called as the first counselor by Brigham Young. Cannon went on to serve as counselor to three more presidents of the church: he was First Counselor to John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. Although Cannon", "id": "19825273" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\ntogether. Prior to her service in the general Primary presidency, Clara Cannon was a counselor in the presidencies of the Primary and Relief Society in the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. When Louie B. Felt became the first general presidency of the Primary, Matilda M. Barratt and Cannon were selected as Felt's counselors. Cannon was a counselor until 1895; the next year she was succeeded in the position by Josephine R. West. Clara Moses Cannon died of throat cancer in Centerville, Utah, aged 87 and was interred in", "id": "10663424" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nScouts of America and served in the organization's Great Salt Lake Council. Prior to his call as a general authority, Cannon served in the church as a bishop, stake president, patriarch, temple sealer, and regional representative. He was also the president of the church's Central British Mission from 1966 to 1969. From 1969 to 1972, Cannon was an assistant and counselor to W. Jay Eldredge, the general superintendent of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association. Cannon became a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy", "id": "8339580" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe Nauvoo Legion. During this time, Cannon served as printer of the \"Deseret News\" while it was publishing in exile in Fillmore, Utah. After the Utah War, he was called as president of the church's Eastern States Mission. The murder of Parley P. Pratt in 1857 created a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. That vacancy was not filled until Brigham Young called Cannon to the apostleship three years later. Cannon was ordained to the priesthood office of apostle on August 26, 1860, at age", "id": "19825270" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nin the Sandwich Islands (later known as the Kingdom of Hawaii), where he served for four years. While in the islands, Cannon converted many Native Hawaiians. One of the most notable was Jonatana Napela, who assisted Cannon in translating the Book of Mormon into Hawaiian. Joseph F. Smith, a future church president, would follow Cannon and serve in Hawaii one year later. Returning to Utah Territory, Cannon married Elizabeth Hoagland (daughter of Abraham Hoagland and his wife.) He was almost immediately called to assist apostle", "id": "19825268" }, { "contents": "Ronald E. Poelman\n\n\nRonald Eugene Poelman (May 10, 1928 – November 19, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 until his death. In 1984, he delivered a controversial sermon in the LDS Church's general conference which the church redacted before publishing. Poelman was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to a Latter-day Saint family. As a young man, he served as a Mormon missionary in the LDS Church's Netherlands Mission. He began his", "id": "4765396" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\n. He would marry Martha Brown of Ogden in 1878. In 1891 he helped to organize the Utah Republican Party. After a failed bid to become delegate from the Utah Territory, he succeeded and served from March 4, 1895, to January 4, 1896. Cannon was chosen in 1896 to serve as senator by the Utah Legislature in spite of LDS church leadership favoring his father for the job. He served in the United States Senate, initially, as a member of the Republican Party; however, he later became a", "id": "11000346" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nmember of the Silver Republican Party, founded by his successor (and future employer at \"The Salt Lake Tribune\") Thomas Kearns. Cannon lost re-election in 1899. Utah's state legislators indicated they would not support Cannon for re-election shortly after the November 1898 elections. Cannon had voted against the Dingley Act, which would have raised tariffs on sugar and helped the Utah sugar industry. It was strongly supported by the LDS Church hierarchy, who now opposed his re-election. Other factors were his support", "id": "11000347" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand Ghana. The first convert baptized in Africa was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and his wife were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' centre in Nauvoo, Illinois. For three months in 1989, Cannon was the interim president of the LDS Church's Germany Hamburg Mission; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. After his interim service as mission president, Cannon was the second president of the Frankfurt Germany Temple from 1989 to", "id": "9582827" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nCounselor to William B. Preston, the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church; he served in this position between 1884 and 1886. In 1884, shortly after Cannon had become a general authority, a sensationalized news story by Joseph Lippman in the \"Salt Lake Tribune\" alleged that Cannon had taken his wife's sister Louie Wells as a plural wife. Lippman suggested that Cannon and Wells had been married in the Logan Temple. In fact, there had been no such marriage, though it was later revealed that Cannon and Wells had", "id": "7202724" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nbranches of the LDS Church in Nigeria and Ghana. The first convert baptized in Nigeria was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and her husband were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' center in Nauvoo, Illinois. In 1989, they served as interim leaders of the Germany Hamburg Mission of the church; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. From 1989 to 1992, Cannon was the matron of the Frankfurt Germany Temple while her husband", "id": "9582966" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\n's Quorum of the Twelve. Abraham was a son of George Q. Cannon, an early member of the church's First Presidency. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary in the church's Central States Mission. After his mission, he served in the United States Air Force during the Second World War. In 1946, he began attending Brigham Young University (BYU). After graduating from BYU, Cannon became a vice president of Beneficial Life Insurance Company in Salt Lake City. He was active in the Boy", "id": "8339579" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\n1925, Cannon became the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church, succeeding Charles W. Nibley. Cannon's counselors were David A. Smith and John Wells. In 1938, Cannon was released as Presiding Bishop and was succeeded by LeGrand Richards. At the same time, Cannon was ordained an apostle and made an \"associate\" of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, a unique position that had never been filled before. When Quorum member Melvin J. Ballard died the next year, Cannon became a full member of the Quorum; he served", "id": "2194374" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\nClarissa Cordelia (\"Clara\") Moses Cannon (April 21, 1839 – August 21, 1926) was a Mormon pioneer and a member of the first-ever general presidency of the Primary organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). She was the second counselor to general president Louie B. Felt from 1880 to 1895. Clara Moses was born in Westfield, Massachusetts. In 1846 she took the six-month journey on the ship \"Brooklyn\" from New York City to San", "id": "10663422" }, { "contents": "Leonora Cannon Taylor\n\n\nLeonora Cannon Taylor (October 6, 1796–December 9, 1868) was a member of the Relief Society organization at the time of its origin and the first wife of John Taylor, the third president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). On October 6, 1796 in Peel, Isle of Man, Leonora Cannon was born to George Cannon and Leonora Callister. As the oldest daughter in the family, when Leonora's father died when she was thirteen she went away to London to work", "id": "16190675" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\ntheir books, which were then distributed by others. However, Cannon & Sons distributed several important books through their stores and mail order (see table). The company had extensive ties to the LDS Church-owned newspaper, the \"Deseret News.\" Five of Cannon's sons held important positions in the paper, and Cannon himself was editor between 1867 and 1872, and again while temporarily owning the paper from 1892 to 1898. Nearly every George Q. Cannon & Sons book was printed on the \"Deseret News\" press", "id": "18344086" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nof the Utah Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Cannon was the oldest son of George Q. Cannon and the one most expected to follow in his prominent father's footsteps in politics, church office, and journalism. Heber J. Grant once said of Cannon: \"There probably is not a young man in the church who had had more opportunities and advantages extended to him educationally, spiritually, and every other way than John Q. Cannon.\" At the age of 27, Cannon was called to serve as the Second", "id": "7202723" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nMartha Maria \"Mattie\" Hughes Cannon (July 1, 1857 – July 10, 1932) was a Welsh-born immigrant to the United States, a polygamous wife, physician, Utah women's rights advocate and suffragist, and Utah State Senator. Her family immigrated to the United States as converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and traveled West to settle in Utah territory with other Mormons. She started working at the age of fourteen. At sixteen she enrolled in the University", "id": "15993465" }, { "contents": "Church Office Building\n\n\nThe Church Office Building is a 28-story building in Salt Lake City, Utah, which houses the administrative support staff for the lay ministry of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) throughout the world. The building is 420 ft (128 m) tall at roof level and is located within the Temple Square complex on the corner of North Temple and State Street. The building was designed by George Cannon Young at a cost of US$31 million to build. Construction took place from 1962 to 1972", "id": "13754819" }, { "contents": "John Lyman Smith\n\n\nJohn Lyman Smith (November 17, 1828 – February 21, 1898) was an American politician and Mormon missionary. He served as a member of the Utah Territory's Legislative Assembly's House of Representatives for Iron County, Utah, from 1852 to 1853, and the Great Salt Lake County, Utah, from 1853 to 1855. Cousin of the founder of the Latter Day Saint Movement, Joseph Smith, Smith was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) who traveled to the", "id": "18219861" }, { "contents": "Francis M. Lyman\n\n\nFrancis Marion Lyman (January 12, 1840 – November 18, 1916) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was the President of the Quorum from 1903 until his death. Lyman's father and son were also apostles in the church: his father was Amasa M. Lyman and his son was Richard R. Lyman. Both his father and son were excommunicated from the church while serving as apostles. Francis M. Lyman was born as", "id": "20761093" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nAngus Munn Cannon (May 17, 1834 – June 7, 1915) was an early Latter Day Saint leader and Mormon pioneer. Cannon was born in Liverpool, Lancashire, England. His Manx parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 1840, being baptized by his uncle John Taylor. In 1842, the Cannon family went to Nauvoo, Illinois, United States. By 1849, they were in Utah Territory. Cannon was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon and their lives followed very similar paths up", "id": "7202650" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\naffairs while Taylor recovered. This training would serve him well in later life. Cannon's father died in 1845. In 1846, Taylor traveled to England to organize the affairs of the church after Smith's death. Meanwhile, Cannon accompanied Taylor's wife and family as they moved to Winter Quarters, Nebraska. When Taylor returned, Cannon traveled with the entire Taylor family to the Salt Lake Valley, arriving in October 1847. In 1849, Cannon was asked by church president Brigham Young to serve as a missionary for the church", "id": "19825267" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nstaying in the position until December 31, 1903. Cannon attempted to prohibit children not vaccinated from attending school in case of a disease outbreak. The Board of Health sent out vaccines; however, the \"Deseret News\" spread information that vaccines weren't safe. LDS Church leaders were divided on the subject. One apostle, Brigham Young Jr. was very vocal in his opinions, writing in the \"Deseret News\" about the evils of vaccinations. The influence of the \"Deseret News\" and Mormon religious leaders limited how many", "id": "15993490" }, { "contents": "Billy Johnson (Mormon)\n\n\nLDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball announced Official Declaration 2 which extended the priesthood to all worthy male members of the church regardless of race or color. In gratitude, Johnson sent a letter to Kimball, explaining that God had prepared the people in Ghana, asking him to send missionaries to the members. Kimball responded to his pleas and sent the first called missionaries Rendell N. Mabey and Rachel Mabey. They joined Edwin Q. Cannon and Janath R. Cannon. Johnson was finally baptized into the LDS Church on December 9, 1978. He", "id": "4108521" }, { "contents": "Juvenile Instructor\n\n\ncatechisms on the Bible, Book of Mormon, and Doctrine and Covenants; musical compositions; illustrations; stories; editorial teachings; and other aids to gospel instruction. It was the first magazine for children published in the United States west of the Mississippi River. For much of its history, \"The Juvenile Instructor\" was owned by the Cannon family. Its first editor was George Q. Cannon, an apostle in the LDS Church. Cannon and his family continued to publish the magazine privately until January 1, 1901, when the", "id": "9210614" }, { "contents": "Joseph F. Smith\n\n\nand as second counselor to Lorenzo Snow (1898–1901). Smith was appointed first counselor to Snow on the death of first counselor George Q. Cannon, but, as Snow himself died only four days later, Smith never served in that position. He succeeded Snow as president of the LDS Church and president of the Salt Lake Temple. He served as president of the temple until 1911, when he transferred the responsibility to Anthon H. Lund. Smith also served as editor of the \"Improvement Era\" and \"Juvenile Instructor\",", "id": "4117444" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in California\n\n\nQ. Cannon began publication in San Francisco of the \"Western Standard\", a weekly periodical supportive of the Church. The first colonization from Utah to California came in 1851 when a company of about 450 saints and slaves under direction of Elders Amasa M. Lyman and Charles C. Rich of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles settled at what is now San Bernardino. The colony was the final settlement in a string of Mormon communities extending from Salt Lake City in an area known as Deseret. The community thrived, and on July 6,", "id": "22187256" }, { "contents": "Sunday School (LDS Church)\n\n\nout. On November 11, 1867, Young and church leaders Daniel H. Wells, George A. Smith, Wilford Woodruff, George Q. Cannon, and Brigham Young, Jr. met and organized the Parent Sunday School Union. Young appointed Cannon as the first general superintendent of the Sunday School, a position he would hold until his death in 1901. In 1872, the Sunday School organization was renamed the Deseret Sunday School Union. The organized Sunday School addressed lesson topics and source materials, grading, prizes and rewards, use of hymns", "id": "8671425" }, { "contents": "Hugh W. Pinnock\n\n\nHugh Wallace Pinnock (January 15, 1934 – December 16, 2000) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Pinnock was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Western States Mission. Pinnock graduated from University of Utah in 1958, where he became a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity and Owl and Key. Prior to his call to the First", "id": "8519001" }, { "contents": "Charles W. Penrose\n\n\nwas organized Penrose was called as a member of the high council. In 1877, Penrose became the assistant editor of the LDS Church-owned \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, working under George Q. Cannon. Penrose was known for his writing, including missionary tracts and lyrics of Latter-day Saint hymns, including \"God of Our Fathers\", \"O Ye Mountains High\", and \"Up, Awake, Ye Defenders of Zion\". In 1880, Penrose became the editor-in-chief of", "id": "2194239" }, { "contents": "Rulon S. Wells\n\n\nRulon Seymour Wells (July 7, 1854 – May 7, 1941) was a Utah politician and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1893 until his death. Wells was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to LDS Church leader Daniel H. Wells (1814–1891) and Louisa Free (1824–1886). In 1875, Wells travelled to Europe as a Mormon missionary and worked primarily in Germany and Switzerland. He returned to the United States in 1877. On", "id": "8315459" }, { "contents": "G. Homer Durham\n\n\nGeorge Homer Durham (February 4, 1911 – January 10, 1985) was an American academic administrator and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Durham was born in Parowan, Utah, and was raised in Salt Lake City. As a boy in grade school, he met and became lifelong friends with future LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley. As a young man, Durham served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the British", "id": "21588256" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nJonatana Napela or Jonathan Hawaii Napela (first name also spelled Iohatana, full name Napelakapuonamahanaonaleleonalani) (September 11, 1813 – August 6, 1879) was one of the earliest Hawaiian converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Hawaii, joining in the 1830s. He helped translate the Book of Mormon into the Hawaiian language, as \"Ka Buke a Moramona,\" working with missionary George Q. Cannon. Napela was appointed to serve as a superintendent of the colony at Kalaupapa, Molokai", "id": "16647246" }, { "contents": "Richfield, Utah\n\n\nserves about 600 students per year. As in most settled areas of rural Utah, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) plays a prominent role. The Mormons were highly industrious colonizers. From 1847, when they founded Salt Lake City, until 1877, they founded 360 towns. Following direction from Brigham Young, Latter-day Saints founded the town and outlying hamlets about 150 years ago. Members of the LDS Church are predominant among the residents. Even in this heart of Mormon country,", "id": "11082836" }, { "contents": "Marvin O. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Owen Ashton (April 8, 1883 – October 7, 1946) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1938 until his death. Prior to becoming a general authority, Ashton was a prominent local leader of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City, Utah. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Mormon parents. He married Rachel Grace Jeremy in 1906 and in 1907 went to England as a missionary for the LDS Church. He returned", "id": "14505232" }, { "contents": "LeGrand Richards\n\n\nLeGrand Richards (February 6, 1886 – January 11, 1983) was a prominent missionary and leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He served as the seventh presiding bishop of the LDS Church from 1938 to 1952, and was then called as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles by church president David O. McKay. Richards served in the Quorum of the Twelve until his death in Salt Lake City, Utah, at the age of 96. Richards was born in", "id": "2294374" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nwas educated at Lahainaluna School. Napela was trained as a lawyer. He was serving as a judge in Wailuku, Hawaii, when he met American George Q. Cannon, a member of the LDS Church on a missionary trip to Hawaii. After Napela's conversion in the 1830s to the LDS Church, the government forced the judge to resign from his position. The LDS Church was regarded with suspicion. LDS Church historian Andrew Jensen said that Napela \"did splendid missionary work for the Church.\" Napela was sent on a specific", "id": "16647248" }, { "contents": "Gardo House\n\n\ncounselor George Q. Cannon and other church leaders suggested that Taylor occupy the Gardo House after its completion, but he repeatedly refused. However, when church members unanimously voted on April 9, 1879, to make the Gardo House the official parsonage for LDS Church presidents, Taylor reluctantly accepted their decision. Moses Thatcher, William Jennings, and Angus M. Cannon were appointed as a committee to oversee completion of the mansion. On December 27, 1881, the Deseret News published a letter from John Taylor announcing a public reception and tour of", "id": "1496184" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nStates Mission of the church in 1901. In 1902, Grant married George J. Cannon. In 1923, Cannon was asked to succeed Mae Taylor Nystrom as the second counselor to Martha Horne Tingey, the general president of what was then called the Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Association. In 1929, when Ruth May Fox succeeded Tingey, Cannon was asked to be her first counselor. Cannon served in this capacity until 1929, when Fox was released and Cannon was selected by her father, who was President of the Church, to", "id": "1681854" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\n. (At the time, Cannon was a counselor to James E. Faust in the church's International Mission, which had jurisdiction over all areas of the world not otherwise part of a mission.) After Bateman and Cannon reported the results of their trip, Cannon and his wife were called and set apart as the first Mormon missionaries to black Africa. They—along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey—preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 35 branches and 5 districts of the LDS Church in Nigeria", "id": "9582826" }, { "contents": "Marion D. Hanks\n\n\nMarion Duff Hanks (October 13, 1921 – August 5, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1953 until his death. Hanks was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man he served in the Northern States Mission of the LDS Church, which was headquartered in Chicago. He was in the United States Navy during World War II and received a J.D. from the University of Utah. Prior to his call as a general authority", "id": "6558935" }, { "contents": "Lillie T. Freeze\n\n\nthe Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association (YLMIA). In this capacity, she was invited to speak at the Salt Lake Tabernacle on April 6, 1880, at a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the LDS Church's founding. In 1880, Lillie Freeze was one of the founding members of the LDS Church's Primary Association. Freeze was appointed as the first secretary of the general presidency, which was composed of Louie B. Felt, Matilda M. Barratt, and Clara C. M. Cannon. Freeze was secretary until 1888, when", "id": "10906695" }, { "contents": "Henry D. Taylor\n\n\nHenry Dixon Taylor (November 22, 1903 – February 24, 1987) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1958 until his death. Taylor was born in Provo, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Eastern States Mission. During his mission, Taylor was the president of the church's Connecticut District. Taylor received a bachelor's degree from Brigham Young University (BYU) and a master's degree", "id": "2477100" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas elected to be the non-voting delegate for Utah Territory in the United States Congress in 1872. He remained a congressional delegate until 1882, when his seat was declared vacant by the enactment of the Edmunds Act, which terminated many political and civil rights for Utah's Mormon polygamists. By 1880, Cannon had served four terms in Congress as Territorial Delegate. The newly appointed anti-Mormon territorial governor, Eli Houston Murray, openly supported the Liberal Party, which generally opposed church candidates. The 1880 territory-wide election", "id": "19825275" }, { "contents": "George F. Richards\n\n\nGeorge Franklin Richards (February 23, 1861 – August 8, 1950) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from April 9, 1906 until his death. He also served as Acting Presiding Patriarch of the LDS Church from 1937 to 1942 and President of the Quorum of the Twelve from May 25, 1945 until his death. Richards was born in Farmington, Utah Territory, the son of Franklin D. Richards and Nanny Longstroth. Richards", "id": "2194252" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\n1882, at the age of 23, Cannon assumed business control of the \"Juvenile Instructor\" and associated publications. He continued his management until his death. In October 1892, Cannon and his brother John Q. Cannon took control of the \"Deseret News\" publishing. He also became the editor and publisher of \"The Contributor\". On October 9, 1882, Cannon became a member of the First Seven Presidents of the Seventy of the church. On October 7, 1889, church president Wilford Woodruff named Cannon a member", "id": "9035316" }, { "contents": "Howard Cannon\n\n\nHis grandfather David Cannon, was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon, and a leading figure in the building of the St. George Temple, who was later the third president of that temple. His father Walter Cannon was one of David Cannon's 31 children. Howard's parents had married in 1909, his mother was Leah Sullivan. When Cannon was two years old his father left for England to served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for two years. Cannon went to Woodward School in", "id": "18060013" }, { "contents": "Mormon fiction\n\n\nMormons were generally non-fiction, including scripture, missionary tracts, and doctrinal literature. In 1844, Parley P. Pratt published what is commonly cited as the first work of LDS fiction, the didactic \"Dialogue between Joseph Smith and the Devil\". It was first published in the New York Herald. Early Mormon leaders like Brigham Young and George Q. Cannon condemned novels for wasting time, a rhetoric that persisted until the 1880s. Fiction among LDS Church members developed once the Mormons had settled in Utah and developed a degree of", "id": "453087" }, { "contents": "Marvin J. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Jeremy Ashton (May 6, 1915 – February 25, 1994) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1971 until his death. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was the son of Marvin O. Ashton, a local LDS leader, who later became a church general authority. The younger Ashton worked in the lumber business as a youth. He graduated from the University of Utah. He served a", "id": "19825413" }, { "contents": "Rudger Clawson\n\n\nRudger Judd Clawson (March 12, 1857 – June 21, 1943) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1898 until his death in 1943. He also served as President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1921 until his death and as a member of the First Presidency of the LDS Church for five days in 1901. Clawson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to Hiram Bradley Clawson and Margaret Judd", "id": "9035430" }, { "contents": "Utah-Idaho Sugar Company\n\n\npayment and a $130,000 loan. Cutler also went to Chicago and New York City to secure loans from banks; he came back, via train, with a bag full of money, as he did not think any banks in Utah could have cashed the large bank draft. The LDS church made more payments and secured more loans. In addition, George Q. Cannon and Heber J. Grant personally funded the enterprise. Joseph F. Smith, president of the LDS Church, gave a sermon in 1893 explaining that this was done to", "id": "1319991" }, { "contents": "President of the Church (LDS Church)\n\n\nthe President of the Quorum. When Woodruff died, his counselors returned to the Quorum based on the date they were ordained an apostle, placing George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith below Brigham Young Jr. and John Willard Young. Heber J. Grant objected to that arguing that seniority should be based on ordination to the Quorum rather than ordination as an apostle. Young argued that an apostle should not be demoted as long as he is worthy of the position. On March 31, 1900, Snow met with his counselors, Cannon and", "id": "16343191" }, { "contents": "Alfred W. McCune\n\n\n. Judge Orlando Powers, Associate Justice of the Utah Supreme Court, said in 1906 that he understood that McCune was not a Mormon. Frank J. Cannon, too, claimed McCune was not a Mormon, and B. H. Roberts, LDS Church historian and member of the First Council of the Seventy, said in 1930 that McCune was not a church member. Historian Orvin Malmquist, however, says that church records show he was baptized into the LDS Church at the age of eight in 1857, and that his marriage to Elizabeth", "id": "15062757" } ]
Joseph Jenne Cannon ( May 22 , 1877 -- November 5 , 1945 ) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ( LDS Church ) . He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family . As a young man , Cannon served as a for the LDS Church in Europe . He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903 . Lyman and Cannon also similarly dedicated Finland in 1903 . In the 1908 election , Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from . He served one term , from 1909 to 1911 . Cannon was not formally associated with any political party . From 1931 to 1934 , Cannon was the editor of the Deseret News , a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church . His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the [START_ENT] president [END_ENT] of the church 's British Mission . Cannon served in this capacity for three years , until 1937 . Immediately following his return to Utah , Cannon was asked to become the first assistant to George Q. Morris , the general superintendent of the church 's . Cannon served in this capacity until his death from pancreatic cancer
507f9055-6884-4902-bed0-e4a82a833564_Joseph_J._Canno:13
[{"answer": "Mission president", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "2047259", "title": "Mission president"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nJoseph Jenne Cannon (May 22, 1877 – November 5, 1945) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Europe. He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in St. Petersburg and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903. Lyman and Cannon", "id": "13710370" }, { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nalso similarly dedicated Finland in 1903. In the 1908 election, Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. He served one term, from 1909 to 1911. Cannon was not formally associated with any political party. From 1931 to 1934, Cannon was the editor of the \"Deseret News\", a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church. His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church's British Mission. Cannon served in this", "id": "13710371" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nSylvester Quayle Cannon (June 10, 1877 – May 29, 1943) was an American businessman, engineer, and religious leader who served as the sixth presiding bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1925 to 1938 and a member of church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1939 until his death. He was the son of George Q. Cannon, an apostle and member of the church's First Presidency. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. He studied", "id": "2194372" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nJohn Quayle Cannon (April 19, 1857 – January 14, 1931) was an editor-in-chief of the \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, Utah, and a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He also served as a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army during the Spanish–American War. He was the son of LDS Church apostle George Q. Cannon and Elizabeth Hoagland. He was married to Elizabeth \"Annie\" Wells Cannon. Cannon", "id": "7202721" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nFrank Jenne Cannon (January 25, 1859July 25, 1933) was the first United States Senator from Utah, who served from 1896 to 1899. Born in Salt Lake City, he was the eldest child of Sarah Jenne Cannon and George Q. Cannon. His father was an Apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and later was a member of its First Presidency. After attending the school in Salt Lake City, he studied at University of Deseret, graduating at the age of 19", "id": "11000345" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nEdwin Quayle \"Ted\" Cannon, Jr. (May 6, 1918 – April 6, 2005) was a Utah politician and businessman and was a prominent leader and missionary in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was among the first missionaries in the LDS Church to preach to black people in Africa and was part of the first group missionaries sent to establish official congregations of the LDS Church in West Africa. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Edwin Q. Cannon,", "id": "9582822" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Ivins Cannon (March 9, 1920 – August 4, 2009) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1986 to 1991. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, Cannon was the son of George J. Cannon and Lucy Grant Cannon, a leader of the youth in the LDS Church. His maternal grandfather was Heber J. Grant, the seventh president of the LDS Church. His paternal grandfather was Abraham H. Cannon, who was a member of the church", "id": "8339578" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nLucy Grant Cannon (October 22, 1880 – May 7, 1966) was the fourth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1937 to 1948. She was a member of the general presidency of the Young Women from 1923 to 1948, serving as a counselor to two presidents. Lucy Grant was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Lucy Stringham and LDS Church apostle Heber J. Grant. She served as a church missionary in the Western", "id": "1681853" }, { "contents": "George Mousley Cannon\n\n\nTrust Company. He served as a delegate to the 1895 Utah State Constitutional Convention and chaired the committee which formulated the articles on taxation and public debt. In 1896, Cannon was elected to the Utah State Senate and served as its first president. When The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) modified stake boundaries in 1900, dividing the new Granite Stake off from the Salt Lake Stake, Cannon became the Sunday School Superintendent of the new stake. From 1901 until after 1930, Cannon served as", "id": "8629874" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nat the University of Utah and then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received a B.S. degree in mining engineering. In 1899, Cannon began an LDS Church mission in Belgium. Cannon then served from 1900 to 1902 as president of the church's Netherlands–Belgium Mission. Cannon also served as Francis M. Lyman's secretary on a three-month trip to many nations along the Mediterranean and in the Middle East. From 1916 to 1925, Cannon served as president of the Pioneer Stake in Salt Lake City. In", "id": "2194373" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\nAbraham Hoagland Cannon (also reported as Abram H. Cannon) (March 12, 1859 – July 19, 1896) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. His parents were George Q. Cannon, a Latter Day Saints apostle, and Elizabeth Hoagland, daughter of Abraham Hoagland. Cannon studied at Deseret University. Later, he studied architecture under Obed Taylor. Cannon married Sarah A.", "id": "9035314" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nSr. and Luella Wareing. He was born at his parents' home because of the 1918 influenza pandemic. Cannon's paternal grandfather was George Q. Cannon, a Mormon pioneer and prominent leader in the LDS Church. Cannon was raised in Salt Lake City. In 1937, Cannon went on a mission for the LDS Church to Nazi Germany. He was president of a branch of the church in Berlin in 1939 when the LDS Church evacuated its missionaries from Europe at the beginning of World War II. Cannon finished his mission in", "id": "9582823" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\n. Callville was submerged when Lake Mead was filled. In 1869 and 1870, Cannon served a second mission in the Eastern United States. In April 1876, Cannon became president of the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. He served in this position until April 1, 1904. After his time as stake president, Cannon served as a patriarch in the church. Cannon was the mayor of St. George, Utah Territory in 1861 and 1862. In 1896, after Utah had become a U.S. state, he stood for election", "id": "7202652" }, { "contents": "Donald Q. Cannon\n\n\nDonald Quayle Cannon (born 1936) is a retired professor at Brigham Young University who specializes in Mormon history, particularly early Mormon history and international Mormon history. As a young man, Cannon was a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Germany. Cannon earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Utah. Cannon holds a Ph.D. from Clark University. In the late 1960s, he taught at the University of Southern Maine. In the LDS Church he has", "id": "10057919" }, { "contents": "George Goddard (Mormon)\n\n\nwas the clerk to LDS Church presiding bishop Edward Hunter. From 1874 to 1884, Goddard was the clerk of the LDS Church's biannual general conferences. In 1872, Goddard became the inaugural first assistant to George Q. Cannon, the first superintendent of the Deseret Sunday School Union. Goddard served in this capacity for 26 years, until his death in 1899. Goddard was also a member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and a patriarch in the church. He died in Salt Lake City and was buried at Salt Lake City Cemetery.", "id": "7701639" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nuntil their arrival in Utah. In 1854, Cannon went on a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to the Eastern United States, where he assisted John Taylor in publishing a periodical entitled \"The Mormon\". He also preached and baptized in Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware. Cannon returned to Utah Territory due to the troubles connected with the Utah War. In 1864, Cannon helped establish Call's Landing on the Colorado River, later known as Callville, Nevada", "id": "7202651" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nJanath Russell Cannon (October 28, 1918 – July 5, 2007) was a counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was also a prominent missionary in the church and was among the first to preach to black people in Africa. Born in Ogden, Utah, Janath Russell was educated at Wellesley College. In 1941, she married Edwin Q. Cannon in the Salt Lake Temple. From 1971 to 1974,", "id": "9582964" }, { "contents": "Joseph A. Cannon\n\n\nserved as an assistant administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from 1983 to 1985. Joseph A. Cannon was born on July 31, 1949. Cannon served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Ireland, including on the Isle of Man, the ancestral homeland of the Cannons. Cannon received a degree in political science and, in 1977, a law degree from Brigham Young University. Cannon served as a law clerk in Salt Lake City for U.S. District", "id": "7202830" }, { "contents": "Elaine A. Cannon\n\n\nElaine Anderson Cannon (April 9, 1922 – May 19, 2003) was the eighth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 to 1984. Cannon has been a writer and an editor and is the author of over 50 books. Elaine Anderson was born to Aldon Joseph and Minnie Egan Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a teenager, she started writing a daily column aimed at teenagers for the \"Deseret News\". She", "id": "1682052" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nAdele Morris Cannon Howells (January 11, 1886 – April 14, 1951) was the fourth general president of the Primary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1943 until her death of rheumatic heart disease. She contributed to \"The Children's Friend\" magazine, as well as the fundraising for the Children's Primary Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. Adele Morris Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to George Mousley Cannon and Marian Adelaide Morris. She", "id": "1336419" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\nGeorgius Young Cannon (March 6, 1892 – March 29, 1987) was a 20th-century architect in the American West who operated principally out of Salt Lake City, Utah. Cannon trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), graduating in 1918. He then joined the army and later returned to Utah to intern with the architectural firm Ware & Treganza and Cannon & Fetzer. He served two missions to Germany for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). For a time", "id": "12786285" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Quayle Cannon (January 11, 1827 – April 12, 1901) was an early member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), and served in the First Presidency under four successive presidents of the church: Brigham Young, John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. He was the church's chief political strategist, and was dubbed \"the Mormon premier\" and \"the Mormon Richelieu\" by the press. He was also a five", "id": "19825263" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nwas the oldest of nine children, and her father George Cannon was the first president of the Utah State Senate. As a child, Cannon suffered from rheumatic fever. She enjoyed reading in her spare time and horseback riding. She was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Cannon attended schools in Salt Lake City and graduated from the LDS High School and Business College in 1903. She attended the University of Utah and studied physical education and graduated with her bachelor's degree in 1909. Cannon", "id": "1336420" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nis one of the few general authorities of the LDS Church to have been excommunicated. From 1889 until 1892, Cannon was the editor of the \"Ogden Standard\". From October 1892 until April 1898, he was the editor in chief of the \"Deseret News\". After the Spanish–American War he returned to work at the \"Deseret News\" and served as an executive editor of the newspaper off-and-on until his death. He was much beloved by his co-workers. Cannon was a member", "id": "7202722" }, { "contents": "Tracy Y. Cannon\n\n\nLatter-day Saints. In 1939, he was made second assistant to Melvin J. Ballard, supervisor of the committee. From 1915 to 1927, Cannon was a member of the high council of the Pioneer Stake of the LDS Church. In 1917, he became a member of the Deseret Sunday School Union General Board. From 1930 through 1936, Cannon was bishop of the Cannon Ward in Salt Lake City. Cannon was an editor of the 1927 LDS Church hymnal. In 1925, Cannon was appointed director of the McCune School", "id": "12019030" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe church's Welsh-language periodical, \"Udgorn Seion\". From 1867 to 1874, Cannon was the managing editor of the \"Deseret News\". It was under his direction that the newspaper was first published on a daily basis. In 1866, Cannon began publication of a magazine for youth and young adult Latter-day Saints called \"The Juvenile Instructor\". He owned and published this magazine until his death; in 1901 his family sold the magazine to the LDS Church's Sunday School organization. The periodical was", "id": "19825272" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nCannon and her husband were heads of the Switzerland Mission of the LDS Church. Upon their return to Utah in 1974, Cannon became the first counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the church's Relief Society. Cannon served in this capacity until 1978, when she was released so that she and her husband could become the first missionaries of the church to preach in \"black Africa\". They — along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey — preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 27", "id": "9582965" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\nan LDS Church organization responsible for educating young members of the LDS church, and the magazine was the first church periodical oriented toward youth. Cannon opened the George Q. Cannon & Sons bookstore in 1867 to sell the magazine and other publications of an uplifting nature. Cannon believed that secular novels did not reflect Latter-day Saint values. In the 1880s, Cannon expanded with a branch in Ogden, Utah. It is not known how many books Cannon & Sons actually published itself. In this era, authors commonly self-published", "id": "18344085" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n. Cannon was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. Cannon fathered 32 children, some of whom are Abraham H. Cannon, John Q. Cannon, and Sylvester Q. Cannon, who all became general authorities of the LDS Church; Frank J. Cannon, Utah's first U.S. Senator; and Lewis T. Cannon and Georgius Y. Cannon, prominent architects in Utah. Some of Cannon's prominent descendants include Howard Cannon, U.S. Senator from Nevada from 1959 to 1983 and Chris Cannon, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1997 to", "id": "19825281" }, { "contents": "Salt Lake City Council Hall\n\n\nwho was then the official architect for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Built at First South and 120 East (more on Salt Lake City's coordinate system), sandstone for the structure was delivered from Red Butte Canyon on Utah's first chartered railroad. The well-furnished Greek revival building was completed at a cost of $70,000. In January 1866, City Hall was dedicated by George Q. Cannon, a prominent LDS leader. Many other LDS leaders attended the dedication including Brigham", "id": "19382830" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\n, Cannon moved to Los Angeles and worked as the office manager of his MIT schoolmate Wallace Neff. He later returned to Utah and designed numerous buildings, mostly residences, and some of which remain on the National Register of Historic Places. Among his works were meetinghouses of the LDS Church and other civic buildings. Cannon served on a church-appointed board of six architects that oversaw the construction of the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple. Cannon was the youngest of 32 children born to LDS Church leader George Q. Cannon. His mother,", "id": "12786286" }, { "contents": "Karl G. Maeser\n\n\nin the General Superintendency of the Deseret Sunday School Union. He was the Second Assistant to General Superintendent George Q. Cannon from July 1894 to January 1899. He then served as the First Assistant to Cannon from January 1899 until February 1901. Maeser also participated in the Utah constitutional convention after Abraham Smoot's death in 1895. He proposed an article to support prohibition, but later backed down. Missionaries from the LDS Church were removed from California in 1858 due to the Utah War. Missionary work resumed in 1892. Maeser presided over", "id": "11030473" }, { "contents": "Frank B. Woodbury\n\n\nFrank Bartlett Woodbury (December 27, 1867 – December 21, 1962) was a leader of and an Acting Presiding Patriarch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), one of only three church members to hold this position in church history. Born in St. George, Utah Territory, to Orin Nelson Woodbury and Ann Cannon, Woodbury served in many capacities in the church on a local level. Some, but not all, LDS Church sources list Woodbury as \"Acting Presiding Patriarch\" of", "id": "8238754" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand 1958 and served three full terms. From 1964 to 1971, Cannon was a bishop of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. From 1971 to 1974, he was the president of the Switzerland Mission of the church. In 1978, three weeks after the LDS Church announced that it would no longer impose restrictions of black people receiving the priesthood or participating in temple ordinances, Cannon traveled to Africa on behalf of the church with Merrill J. Bateman to assess the prospects for church missionary work and growth in \"black Africa\"", "id": "9582825" }, { "contents": "Amasa Lyman\n\n\n). Lyman served as the first mayor of San Bernardino. In 1860, Young appointed three of the twelve apostles—Lyman, Charles C. Rich, and George Q. Cannon—to the presidency of the church's European Mission. On March 16, 1862, Lyman preached a sermon in Dundee, Scotland, which all but denied the reality of and the necessity for the atonement of Jesus Christ, which is a central tenet of the LDS Church. His speech appeared to have been overlooked for years, but on January 21", "id": "12068047" }, { "contents": "Mark E. Petersen\n\n\nMark Edward Petersen (November 7, 1900 – January 11, 1984) was an American news editor and religious leader who served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1944 until his death. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, he filled the vacancy in the Quorum caused by the excommunication of Richard R. Lyman. Petersen had become managing editor of the church-owned \"Deseret News\" in 1935 and editor in 1941.", "id": "2692480" }, { "contents": "Thomas C. Griggs\n\n\nthe LDS Church's Aaronic priesthood; his call to this office was given by Apostle George Q. Cannon. With the outbreak of the American Civil War, the Griggs heeded the counsel of LDS Church leaders to move to Utah Territory. The Griggs crossed the plains in Joseph Horne's Mormon pioneer company in 1861. Griggs first joined the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in 1866 when Charles John Thomas was the director. Griggs would continue as a member of the choir until his death in 1903. While Robert Sands was the conductor of the choir", "id": "9481149" }, { "contents": "Charles Clarence Neslen\n\n\nfrom Germany and he was imprisoned in Danzig. He served as president of the Königsberg District of the LDS Church for a part of his mission. Neslen was a member of the Democratic Party and a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1912. Neslen worked a total of 15 years for the \"Deseret News\". He was also a realtor and for a time served as secretary of the Salt Lake Real Estate Association. On October 26, 1905, Neslen married Grace T. Cannon, a daughter of George Q. Cannon.", "id": "21092533" }, { "contents": "Stephen L. Chipman\n\n\nStephen L. Chipman (1864–1945) was a member of the Utah State Legislature in 1903 and a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Utah County. He was also the first president of the Salt Lake Temple who was not also an apostle in the LDS Church. Chipman studied at Brigham Young Academy (the predecessor of Brigham Young University (BYU)) as a youth. From 1885 to 1887 he served as a Mormon missionary in the Southern States Mission of the LDS Church", "id": "15228384" }, { "contents": "Mountain Meadows massacre and Mormon public relations\n\n\nCannon, then president of the LDS California Mission. In the October 13, 1857 edition of Cannon's San Francisco newspaper \"The Western Standard\", Cannon responded to initial news reports of involvement by Mormons by charging the responsible journalists with writing \"reckless and malignant slanders\", despite knowing that the southern Utah Mormons were \"as innocent of [the massacre] as the child unborn\". The church's official newspaper in Salt Lake City, \"The Deseret News\", was initially slow to comment on the massacre,", "id": "22212632" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas the second-most senior apostle of the church after the death of Woodruff, Cannon did not become President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, as would be the practice in the LDS Church today. Rather, because Cannon was a member of the First Presidency, the church simply appointed the next senior apostle of the church—Brigham Young, Jr.—to be the quorum president. (Under today's practices, Cannon would have been appointed the president of the quorum and Young would have been appointed acting president.) Cannon", "id": "19825274" }, { "contents": "Clifford E. Young\n\n\nClifford Earle Young (December 7, 1883 – August 21, 1958) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1941 until his death. Young was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, the son of LDS Church leader Seymour B. Young. From 1905 to 1908, he served as a Mormon missionary in England and Germany. In 1928, Young became the president of the Alpine Stake of the LDS Church in Utah. In 1934, he joined the", "id": "8315768" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n33. Upon his joining the Quorum of the Twelve, Cannon was called to preside over the church's European Mission. Cannon's mission in Europe ended when he was recalled by Young in 1862 to work in Washington, D.C., to assist in the church's promotion of Utah Territory's bid for statehood. At the adjournment of the 1862 congressional session, Cannon again left for Europe to preside over the mission. In this capacity, Cannon was the editor of the \"Millennial Star\" and, for a short time,", "id": "19825271" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nfrom the federal authorities. In September 1888, Cannon surrendered himself and pleaded guilty at trial to charges of unlawful cohabitation under the Edmunds Act. As a result, Cannon served nearly six months in Utah's federal penitentiary. Cannon was pardoned in 1894 by U.S. President Grover Cleveland. Cannon died on April 12, 1901, in Monterey, California, at 74 years of age. Had he lived a few months longer, he would have become the President of the LDS Church: Lorenzo Snow died on October 10 of that year", "id": "19825280" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Isle of Man\n\n\nand Idaho which descends from the 19th century marriage of George Cannon and Ann Quayle before their emigration from Peel, Isle of Man. The family's most notable member was their oldest son George Quayle Cannon. The family is connected by marriage to the Bennion, Taylor, Wells and Young political families. LDS Membership statistics as of January 1, 2011 for the Isle of Man. The nation of the Isle of Man does not have its own mission. Instead it is served by an English mission. Five out of the six", "id": "7797107" }, { "contents": "The Contributor (LDS magazine)\n\n\nThe Contributor was an independent publication associated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) between 1879 and 1896. It was a monthly periodical and sought to represent the Young Men's and Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Associations (YMMIA and YLMIA respectively), the youth organizations of the LDS Church at the time. It was founded by Junius F. Wells, the inaugural head of the YMMIA. Abraham H. Cannon became editor when the magazine was purchased by the Cannon Publishing Company in 1892. With the", "id": "505110" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe official organ of the Sunday School until 1930, when it was replaced with \"The Instructor\". Cannon also served as the first general superintendent of the church's Sunday School from 1867 until his death. On April 8, 1873, Cannon became a member of the church's First Presidency when he was called as the first counselor by Brigham Young. Cannon went on to serve as counselor to three more presidents of the church: he was First Counselor to John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. Although Cannon", "id": "19825273" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\ntogether. Prior to her service in the general Primary presidency, Clara Cannon was a counselor in the presidencies of the Primary and Relief Society in the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. When Louie B. Felt became the first general presidency of the Primary, Matilda M. Barratt and Cannon were selected as Felt's counselors. Cannon was a counselor until 1895; the next year she was succeeded in the position by Josephine R. West. Clara Moses Cannon died of throat cancer in Centerville, Utah, aged 87 and was interred in", "id": "10663424" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nScouts of America and served in the organization's Great Salt Lake Council. Prior to his call as a general authority, Cannon served in the church as a bishop, stake president, patriarch, temple sealer, and regional representative. He was also the president of the church's Central British Mission from 1966 to 1969. From 1969 to 1972, Cannon was an assistant and counselor to W. Jay Eldredge, the general superintendent of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association. Cannon became a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy", "id": "8339580" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe Nauvoo Legion. During this time, Cannon served as printer of the \"Deseret News\" while it was publishing in exile in Fillmore, Utah. After the Utah War, he was called as president of the church's Eastern States Mission. The murder of Parley P. Pratt in 1857 created a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. That vacancy was not filled until Brigham Young called Cannon to the apostleship three years later. Cannon was ordained to the priesthood office of apostle on August 26, 1860, at age", "id": "19825270" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nin the Sandwich Islands (later known as the Kingdom of Hawaii), where he served for four years. While in the islands, Cannon converted many Native Hawaiians. One of the most notable was Jonatana Napela, who assisted Cannon in translating the Book of Mormon into Hawaiian. Joseph F. Smith, a future church president, would follow Cannon and serve in Hawaii one year later. Returning to Utah Territory, Cannon married Elizabeth Hoagland (daughter of Abraham Hoagland and his wife.) He was almost immediately called to assist apostle", "id": "19825268" }, { "contents": "Ronald E. Poelman\n\n\nRonald Eugene Poelman (May 10, 1928 – November 19, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 until his death. In 1984, he delivered a controversial sermon in the LDS Church's general conference which the church redacted before publishing. Poelman was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to a Latter-day Saint family. As a young man, he served as a Mormon missionary in the LDS Church's Netherlands Mission. He began his", "id": "4765396" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\n. He would marry Martha Brown of Ogden in 1878. In 1891 he helped to organize the Utah Republican Party. After a failed bid to become delegate from the Utah Territory, he succeeded and served from March 4, 1895, to January 4, 1896. Cannon was chosen in 1896 to serve as senator by the Utah Legislature in spite of LDS church leadership favoring his father for the job. He served in the United States Senate, initially, as a member of the Republican Party; however, he later became a", "id": "11000346" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nmember of the Silver Republican Party, founded by his successor (and future employer at \"The Salt Lake Tribune\") Thomas Kearns. Cannon lost re-election in 1899. Utah's state legislators indicated they would not support Cannon for re-election shortly after the November 1898 elections. Cannon had voted against the Dingley Act, which would have raised tariffs on sugar and helped the Utah sugar industry. It was strongly supported by the LDS Church hierarchy, who now opposed his re-election. Other factors were his support", "id": "11000347" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand Ghana. The first convert baptized in Africa was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and his wife were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' centre in Nauvoo, Illinois. For three months in 1989, Cannon was the interim president of the LDS Church's Germany Hamburg Mission; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. After his interim service as mission president, Cannon was the second president of the Frankfurt Germany Temple from 1989 to", "id": "9582827" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nCounselor to William B. Preston, the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church; he served in this position between 1884 and 1886. In 1884, shortly after Cannon had become a general authority, a sensationalized news story by Joseph Lippman in the \"Salt Lake Tribune\" alleged that Cannon had taken his wife's sister Louie Wells as a plural wife. Lippman suggested that Cannon and Wells had been married in the Logan Temple. In fact, there had been no such marriage, though it was later revealed that Cannon and Wells had", "id": "7202724" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nbranches of the LDS Church in Nigeria and Ghana. The first convert baptized in Nigeria was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and her husband were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' center in Nauvoo, Illinois. In 1989, they served as interim leaders of the Germany Hamburg Mission of the church; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. From 1989 to 1992, Cannon was the matron of the Frankfurt Germany Temple while her husband", "id": "9582966" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\n's Quorum of the Twelve. Abraham was a son of George Q. Cannon, an early member of the church's First Presidency. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary in the church's Central States Mission. After his mission, he served in the United States Air Force during the Second World War. In 1946, he began attending Brigham Young University (BYU). After graduating from BYU, Cannon became a vice president of Beneficial Life Insurance Company in Salt Lake City. He was active in the Boy", "id": "8339579" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\n1925, Cannon became the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church, succeeding Charles W. Nibley. Cannon's counselors were David A. Smith and John Wells. In 1938, Cannon was released as Presiding Bishop and was succeeded by LeGrand Richards. At the same time, Cannon was ordained an apostle and made an \"associate\" of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, a unique position that had never been filled before. When Quorum member Melvin J. Ballard died the next year, Cannon became a full member of the Quorum; he served", "id": "2194374" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\nClarissa Cordelia (\"Clara\") Moses Cannon (April 21, 1839 – August 21, 1926) was a Mormon pioneer and a member of the first-ever general presidency of the Primary organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). She was the second counselor to general president Louie B. Felt from 1880 to 1895. Clara Moses was born in Westfield, Massachusetts. In 1846 she took the six-month journey on the ship \"Brooklyn\" from New York City to San", "id": "10663422" }, { "contents": "Leonora Cannon Taylor\n\n\nLeonora Cannon Taylor (October 6, 1796–December 9, 1868) was a member of the Relief Society organization at the time of its origin and the first wife of John Taylor, the third president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). On October 6, 1796 in Peel, Isle of Man, Leonora Cannon was born to George Cannon and Leonora Callister. As the oldest daughter in the family, when Leonora's father died when she was thirteen she went away to London to work", "id": "16190675" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\ntheir books, which were then distributed by others. However, Cannon & Sons distributed several important books through their stores and mail order (see table). The company had extensive ties to the LDS Church-owned newspaper, the \"Deseret News.\" Five of Cannon's sons held important positions in the paper, and Cannon himself was editor between 1867 and 1872, and again while temporarily owning the paper from 1892 to 1898. Nearly every George Q. Cannon & Sons book was printed on the \"Deseret News\" press", "id": "18344086" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nof the Utah Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Cannon was the oldest son of George Q. Cannon and the one most expected to follow in his prominent father's footsteps in politics, church office, and journalism. Heber J. Grant once said of Cannon: \"There probably is not a young man in the church who had had more opportunities and advantages extended to him educationally, spiritually, and every other way than John Q. Cannon.\" At the age of 27, Cannon was called to serve as the Second", "id": "7202723" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nMartha Maria \"Mattie\" Hughes Cannon (July 1, 1857 – July 10, 1932) was a Welsh-born immigrant to the United States, a polygamous wife, physician, Utah women's rights advocate and suffragist, and Utah State Senator. Her family immigrated to the United States as converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and traveled West to settle in Utah territory with other Mormons. She started working at the age of fourteen. At sixteen she enrolled in the University", "id": "15993465" }, { "contents": "Church Office Building\n\n\nThe Church Office Building is a 28-story building in Salt Lake City, Utah, which houses the administrative support staff for the lay ministry of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) throughout the world. The building is 420 ft (128 m) tall at roof level and is located within the Temple Square complex on the corner of North Temple and State Street. The building was designed by George Cannon Young at a cost of US$31 million to build. Construction took place from 1962 to 1972", "id": "13754819" }, { "contents": "John Lyman Smith\n\n\nJohn Lyman Smith (November 17, 1828 – February 21, 1898) was an American politician and Mormon missionary. He served as a member of the Utah Territory's Legislative Assembly's House of Representatives for Iron County, Utah, from 1852 to 1853, and the Great Salt Lake County, Utah, from 1853 to 1855. Cousin of the founder of the Latter Day Saint Movement, Joseph Smith, Smith was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) who traveled to the", "id": "18219861" }, { "contents": "Francis M. Lyman\n\n\nFrancis Marion Lyman (January 12, 1840 – November 18, 1916) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was the President of the Quorum from 1903 until his death. Lyman's father and son were also apostles in the church: his father was Amasa M. Lyman and his son was Richard R. Lyman. Both his father and son were excommunicated from the church while serving as apostles. Francis M. Lyman was born as", "id": "20761093" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nAngus Munn Cannon (May 17, 1834 – June 7, 1915) was an early Latter Day Saint leader and Mormon pioneer. Cannon was born in Liverpool, Lancashire, England. His Manx parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 1840, being baptized by his uncle John Taylor. In 1842, the Cannon family went to Nauvoo, Illinois, United States. By 1849, they were in Utah Territory. Cannon was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon and their lives followed very similar paths up", "id": "7202650" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\naffairs while Taylor recovered. This training would serve him well in later life. Cannon's father died in 1845. In 1846, Taylor traveled to England to organize the affairs of the church after Smith's death. Meanwhile, Cannon accompanied Taylor's wife and family as they moved to Winter Quarters, Nebraska. When Taylor returned, Cannon traveled with the entire Taylor family to the Salt Lake Valley, arriving in October 1847. In 1849, Cannon was asked by church president Brigham Young to serve as a missionary for the church", "id": "19825267" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nstaying in the position until December 31, 1903. Cannon attempted to prohibit children not vaccinated from attending school in case of a disease outbreak. The Board of Health sent out vaccines; however, the \"Deseret News\" spread information that vaccines weren't safe. LDS Church leaders were divided on the subject. One apostle, Brigham Young Jr. was very vocal in his opinions, writing in the \"Deseret News\" about the evils of vaccinations. The influence of the \"Deseret News\" and Mormon religious leaders limited how many", "id": "15993490" }, { "contents": "Billy Johnson (Mormon)\n\n\nLDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball announced Official Declaration 2 which extended the priesthood to all worthy male members of the church regardless of race or color. In gratitude, Johnson sent a letter to Kimball, explaining that God had prepared the people in Ghana, asking him to send missionaries to the members. Kimball responded to his pleas and sent the first called missionaries Rendell N. Mabey and Rachel Mabey. They joined Edwin Q. Cannon and Janath R. Cannon. Johnson was finally baptized into the LDS Church on December 9, 1978. He", "id": "4108521" }, { "contents": "Juvenile Instructor\n\n\ncatechisms on the Bible, Book of Mormon, and Doctrine and Covenants; musical compositions; illustrations; stories; editorial teachings; and other aids to gospel instruction. It was the first magazine for children published in the United States west of the Mississippi River. For much of its history, \"The Juvenile Instructor\" was owned by the Cannon family. Its first editor was George Q. Cannon, an apostle in the LDS Church. Cannon and his family continued to publish the magazine privately until January 1, 1901, when the", "id": "9210614" }, { "contents": "Joseph F. Smith\n\n\nand as second counselor to Lorenzo Snow (1898–1901). Smith was appointed first counselor to Snow on the death of first counselor George Q. Cannon, but, as Snow himself died only four days later, Smith never served in that position. He succeeded Snow as president of the LDS Church and president of the Salt Lake Temple. He served as president of the temple until 1911, when he transferred the responsibility to Anthon H. Lund. Smith also served as editor of the \"Improvement Era\" and \"Juvenile Instructor\",", "id": "4117444" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in California\n\n\nQ. Cannon began publication in San Francisco of the \"Western Standard\", a weekly periodical supportive of the Church. The first colonization from Utah to California came in 1851 when a company of about 450 saints and slaves under direction of Elders Amasa M. Lyman and Charles C. Rich of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles settled at what is now San Bernardino. The colony was the final settlement in a string of Mormon communities extending from Salt Lake City in an area known as Deseret. The community thrived, and on July 6,", "id": "22187256" }, { "contents": "Sunday School (LDS Church)\n\n\nout. On November 11, 1867, Young and church leaders Daniel H. Wells, George A. Smith, Wilford Woodruff, George Q. Cannon, and Brigham Young, Jr. met and organized the Parent Sunday School Union. Young appointed Cannon as the first general superintendent of the Sunday School, a position he would hold until his death in 1901. In 1872, the Sunday School organization was renamed the Deseret Sunday School Union. The organized Sunday School addressed lesson topics and source materials, grading, prizes and rewards, use of hymns", "id": "8671425" }, { "contents": "Hugh W. Pinnock\n\n\nHugh Wallace Pinnock (January 15, 1934 – December 16, 2000) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Pinnock was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Western States Mission. Pinnock graduated from University of Utah in 1958, where he became a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity and Owl and Key. Prior to his call to the First", "id": "8519001" }, { "contents": "Charles W. Penrose\n\n\nwas organized Penrose was called as a member of the high council. In 1877, Penrose became the assistant editor of the LDS Church-owned \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, working under George Q. Cannon. Penrose was known for his writing, including missionary tracts and lyrics of Latter-day Saint hymns, including \"God of Our Fathers\", \"O Ye Mountains High\", and \"Up, Awake, Ye Defenders of Zion\". In 1880, Penrose became the editor-in-chief of", "id": "2194239" }, { "contents": "Rulon S. Wells\n\n\nRulon Seymour Wells (July 7, 1854 – May 7, 1941) was a Utah politician and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1893 until his death. Wells was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to LDS Church leader Daniel H. Wells (1814–1891) and Louisa Free (1824–1886). In 1875, Wells travelled to Europe as a Mormon missionary and worked primarily in Germany and Switzerland. He returned to the United States in 1877. On", "id": "8315459" }, { "contents": "G. Homer Durham\n\n\nGeorge Homer Durham (February 4, 1911 – January 10, 1985) was an American academic administrator and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Durham was born in Parowan, Utah, and was raised in Salt Lake City. As a boy in grade school, he met and became lifelong friends with future LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley. As a young man, Durham served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the British", "id": "21588256" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nJonatana Napela or Jonathan Hawaii Napela (first name also spelled Iohatana, full name Napelakapuonamahanaonaleleonalani) (September 11, 1813 – August 6, 1879) was one of the earliest Hawaiian converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Hawaii, joining in the 1830s. He helped translate the Book of Mormon into the Hawaiian language, as \"Ka Buke a Moramona,\" working with missionary George Q. Cannon. Napela was appointed to serve as a superintendent of the colony at Kalaupapa, Molokai", "id": "16647246" }, { "contents": "Richfield, Utah\n\n\nserves about 600 students per year. As in most settled areas of rural Utah, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) plays a prominent role. The Mormons were highly industrious colonizers. From 1847, when they founded Salt Lake City, until 1877, they founded 360 towns. Following direction from Brigham Young, Latter-day Saints founded the town and outlying hamlets about 150 years ago. Members of the LDS Church are predominant among the residents. Even in this heart of Mormon country,", "id": "11082836" }, { "contents": "Marvin O. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Owen Ashton (April 8, 1883 – October 7, 1946) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1938 until his death. Prior to becoming a general authority, Ashton was a prominent local leader of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City, Utah. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Mormon parents. He married Rachel Grace Jeremy in 1906 and in 1907 went to England as a missionary for the LDS Church. He returned", "id": "14505232" }, { "contents": "LeGrand Richards\n\n\nLeGrand Richards (February 6, 1886 – January 11, 1983) was a prominent missionary and leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He served as the seventh presiding bishop of the LDS Church from 1938 to 1952, and was then called as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles by church president David O. McKay. Richards served in the Quorum of the Twelve until his death in Salt Lake City, Utah, at the age of 96. Richards was born in", "id": "2294374" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nwas educated at Lahainaluna School. Napela was trained as a lawyer. He was serving as a judge in Wailuku, Hawaii, when he met American George Q. Cannon, a member of the LDS Church on a missionary trip to Hawaii. After Napela's conversion in the 1830s to the LDS Church, the government forced the judge to resign from his position. The LDS Church was regarded with suspicion. LDS Church historian Andrew Jensen said that Napela \"did splendid missionary work for the Church.\" Napela was sent on a specific", "id": "16647248" }, { "contents": "Gardo House\n\n\ncounselor George Q. Cannon and other church leaders suggested that Taylor occupy the Gardo House after its completion, but he repeatedly refused. However, when church members unanimously voted on April 9, 1879, to make the Gardo House the official parsonage for LDS Church presidents, Taylor reluctantly accepted their decision. Moses Thatcher, William Jennings, and Angus M. Cannon were appointed as a committee to oversee completion of the mansion. On December 27, 1881, the Deseret News published a letter from John Taylor announcing a public reception and tour of", "id": "1496184" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nStates Mission of the church in 1901. In 1902, Grant married George J. Cannon. In 1923, Cannon was asked to succeed Mae Taylor Nystrom as the second counselor to Martha Horne Tingey, the general president of what was then called the Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Association. In 1929, when Ruth May Fox succeeded Tingey, Cannon was asked to be her first counselor. Cannon served in this capacity until 1929, when Fox was released and Cannon was selected by her father, who was President of the Church, to", "id": "1681854" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\n. (At the time, Cannon was a counselor to James E. Faust in the church's International Mission, which had jurisdiction over all areas of the world not otherwise part of a mission.) After Bateman and Cannon reported the results of their trip, Cannon and his wife were called and set apart as the first Mormon missionaries to black Africa. They—along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey—preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 35 branches and 5 districts of the LDS Church in Nigeria", "id": "9582826" }, { "contents": "Marion D. Hanks\n\n\nMarion Duff Hanks (October 13, 1921 – August 5, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1953 until his death. Hanks was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man he served in the Northern States Mission of the LDS Church, which was headquartered in Chicago. He was in the United States Navy during World War II and received a J.D. from the University of Utah. Prior to his call as a general authority", "id": "6558935" }, { "contents": "Lillie T. Freeze\n\n\nthe Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association (YLMIA). In this capacity, she was invited to speak at the Salt Lake Tabernacle on April 6, 1880, at a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the LDS Church's founding. In 1880, Lillie Freeze was one of the founding members of the LDS Church's Primary Association. Freeze was appointed as the first secretary of the general presidency, which was composed of Louie B. Felt, Matilda M. Barratt, and Clara C. M. Cannon. Freeze was secretary until 1888, when", "id": "10906695" }, { "contents": "Henry D. Taylor\n\n\nHenry Dixon Taylor (November 22, 1903 – February 24, 1987) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1958 until his death. Taylor was born in Provo, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Eastern States Mission. During his mission, Taylor was the president of the church's Connecticut District. Taylor received a bachelor's degree from Brigham Young University (BYU) and a master's degree", "id": "2477100" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas elected to be the non-voting delegate for Utah Territory in the United States Congress in 1872. He remained a congressional delegate until 1882, when his seat was declared vacant by the enactment of the Edmunds Act, which terminated many political and civil rights for Utah's Mormon polygamists. By 1880, Cannon had served four terms in Congress as Territorial Delegate. The newly appointed anti-Mormon territorial governor, Eli Houston Murray, openly supported the Liberal Party, which generally opposed church candidates. The 1880 territory-wide election", "id": "19825275" }, { "contents": "George F. Richards\n\n\nGeorge Franklin Richards (February 23, 1861 – August 8, 1950) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from April 9, 1906 until his death. He also served as Acting Presiding Patriarch of the LDS Church from 1937 to 1942 and President of the Quorum of the Twelve from May 25, 1945 until his death. Richards was born in Farmington, Utah Territory, the son of Franklin D. Richards and Nanny Longstroth. Richards", "id": "2194252" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\n1882, at the age of 23, Cannon assumed business control of the \"Juvenile Instructor\" and associated publications. He continued his management until his death. In October 1892, Cannon and his brother John Q. Cannon took control of the \"Deseret News\" publishing. He also became the editor and publisher of \"The Contributor\". On October 9, 1882, Cannon became a member of the First Seven Presidents of the Seventy of the church. On October 7, 1889, church president Wilford Woodruff named Cannon a member", "id": "9035316" }, { "contents": "Howard Cannon\n\n\nHis grandfather David Cannon, was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon, and a leading figure in the building of the St. George Temple, who was later the third president of that temple. His father Walter Cannon was one of David Cannon's 31 children. Howard's parents had married in 1909, his mother was Leah Sullivan. When Cannon was two years old his father left for England to served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for two years. Cannon went to Woodward School in", "id": "18060013" }, { "contents": "Mormon fiction\n\n\nMormons were generally non-fiction, including scripture, missionary tracts, and doctrinal literature. In 1844, Parley P. Pratt published what is commonly cited as the first work of LDS fiction, the didactic \"Dialogue between Joseph Smith and the Devil\". It was first published in the New York Herald. Early Mormon leaders like Brigham Young and George Q. Cannon condemned novels for wasting time, a rhetoric that persisted until the 1880s. Fiction among LDS Church members developed once the Mormons had settled in Utah and developed a degree of", "id": "453087" }, { "contents": "Marvin J. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Jeremy Ashton (May 6, 1915 – February 25, 1994) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1971 until his death. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was the son of Marvin O. Ashton, a local LDS leader, who later became a church general authority. The younger Ashton worked in the lumber business as a youth. He graduated from the University of Utah. He served a", "id": "19825413" }, { "contents": "Rudger Clawson\n\n\nRudger Judd Clawson (March 12, 1857 – June 21, 1943) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1898 until his death in 1943. He also served as President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1921 until his death and as a member of the First Presidency of the LDS Church for five days in 1901. Clawson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to Hiram Bradley Clawson and Margaret Judd", "id": "9035430" }, { "contents": "Utah-Idaho Sugar Company\n\n\npayment and a $130,000 loan. Cutler also went to Chicago and New York City to secure loans from banks; he came back, via train, with a bag full of money, as he did not think any banks in Utah could have cashed the large bank draft. The LDS church made more payments and secured more loans. In addition, George Q. Cannon and Heber J. Grant personally funded the enterprise. Joseph F. Smith, president of the LDS Church, gave a sermon in 1893 explaining that this was done to", "id": "1319991" }, { "contents": "President of the Church (LDS Church)\n\n\nthe President of the Quorum. When Woodruff died, his counselors returned to the Quorum based on the date they were ordained an apostle, placing George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith below Brigham Young Jr. and John Willard Young. Heber J. Grant objected to that arguing that seniority should be based on ordination to the Quorum rather than ordination as an apostle. Young argued that an apostle should not be demoted as long as he is worthy of the position. On March 31, 1900, Snow met with his counselors, Cannon and", "id": "16343191" }, { "contents": "Alfred W. McCune\n\n\n. Judge Orlando Powers, Associate Justice of the Utah Supreme Court, said in 1906 that he understood that McCune was not a Mormon. Frank J. Cannon, too, claimed McCune was not a Mormon, and B. H. Roberts, LDS Church historian and member of the First Council of the Seventy, said in 1930 that McCune was not a church member. Historian Orvin Malmquist, however, says that church records show he was baptized into the LDS Church at the age of eight in 1857, and that his marriage to Elizabeth", "id": "15062757" } ]
Joseph Jenne Cannon ( May 22 , 1877 -- November 5 , 1945 ) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ( LDS Church ) . He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family . As a young man , Cannon served as a for the LDS Church in Europe . He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903 . Lyman and Cannon also similarly dedicated Finland in 1903 . In the 1908 election , Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from . He served one term , from 1909 to 1911 . Cannon was not formally associated with any political party . From 1931 to 1934 , Cannon was the editor of the Deseret News , a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church . His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church 's British [START_ENT] Mission [END_ENT] . Cannon served in this capacity for three years , until 1937 . Immediately following his return to Utah , Cannon was asked to become the first assistant to George Q. Morris , the general superintendent of the church 's . Cannon served in this capacity until his death from pancreatic cancer
3217bf06-7e4d-4efe-87e5-4babd224ad4c_Joseph_J._Canno:14
[{"answer": "Mission (LDS Church)", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "5810892", "title": "Mission (LDS Church)"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nJoseph Jenne Cannon (May 22, 1877 – November 5, 1945) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Europe. He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in St. Petersburg and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903. Lyman and Cannon", "id": "13710370" }, { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nalso similarly dedicated Finland in 1903. In the 1908 election, Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. He served one term, from 1909 to 1911. Cannon was not formally associated with any political party. From 1931 to 1934, Cannon was the editor of the \"Deseret News\", a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church. His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church's British Mission. Cannon served in this", "id": "13710371" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nSylvester Quayle Cannon (June 10, 1877 – May 29, 1943) was an American businessman, engineer, and religious leader who served as the sixth presiding bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1925 to 1938 and a member of church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1939 until his death. He was the son of George Q. Cannon, an apostle and member of the church's First Presidency. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. He studied", "id": "2194372" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nJohn Quayle Cannon (April 19, 1857 – January 14, 1931) was an editor-in-chief of the \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, Utah, and a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He also served as a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army during the Spanish–American War. He was the son of LDS Church apostle George Q. Cannon and Elizabeth Hoagland. He was married to Elizabeth \"Annie\" Wells Cannon. Cannon", "id": "7202721" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nFrank Jenne Cannon (January 25, 1859July 25, 1933) was the first United States Senator from Utah, who served from 1896 to 1899. Born in Salt Lake City, he was the eldest child of Sarah Jenne Cannon and George Q. Cannon. His father was an Apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and later was a member of its First Presidency. After attending the school in Salt Lake City, he studied at University of Deseret, graduating at the age of 19", "id": "11000345" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nEdwin Quayle \"Ted\" Cannon, Jr. (May 6, 1918 – April 6, 2005) was a Utah politician and businessman and was a prominent leader and missionary in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was among the first missionaries in the LDS Church to preach to black people in Africa and was part of the first group missionaries sent to establish official congregations of the LDS Church in West Africa. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Edwin Q. Cannon,", "id": "9582822" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Ivins Cannon (March 9, 1920 – August 4, 2009) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1986 to 1991. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, Cannon was the son of George J. Cannon and Lucy Grant Cannon, a leader of the youth in the LDS Church. His maternal grandfather was Heber J. Grant, the seventh president of the LDS Church. His paternal grandfather was Abraham H. Cannon, who was a member of the church", "id": "8339578" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nLucy Grant Cannon (October 22, 1880 – May 7, 1966) was the fourth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1937 to 1948. She was a member of the general presidency of the Young Women from 1923 to 1948, serving as a counselor to two presidents. Lucy Grant was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Lucy Stringham and LDS Church apostle Heber J. Grant. She served as a church missionary in the Western", "id": "1681853" }, { "contents": "George Mousley Cannon\n\n\nTrust Company. He served as a delegate to the 1895 Utah State Constitutional Convention and chaired the committee which formulated the articles on taxation and public debt. In 1896, Cannon was elected to the Utah State Senate and served as its first president. When The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) modified stake boundaries in 1900, dividing the new Granite Stake off from the Salt Lake Stake, Cannon became the Sunday School Superintendent of the new stake. From 1901 until after 1930, Cannon served as", "id": "8629874" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nat the University of Utah and then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received a B.S. degree in mining engineering. In 1899, Cannon began an LDS Church mission in Belgium. Cannon then served from 1900 to 1902 as president of the church's Netherlands–Belgium Mission. Cannon also served as Francis M. Lyman's secretary on a three-month trip to many nations along the Mediterranean and in the Middle East. From 1916 to 1925, Cannon served as president of the Pioneer Stake in Salt Lake City. In", "id": "2194373" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\nAbraham Hoagland Cannon (also reported as Abram H. Cannon) (March 12, 1859 – July 19, 1896) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. His parents were George Q. Cannon, a Latter Day Saints apostle, and Elizabeth Hoagland, daughter of Abraham Hoagland. Cannon studied at Deseret University. Later, he studied architecture under Obed Taylor. Cannon married Sarah A.", "id": "9035314" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nSr. and Luella Wareing. He was born at his parents' home because of the 1918 influenza pandemic. Cannon's paternal grandfather was George Q. Cannon, a Mormon pioneer and prominent leader in the LDS Church. Cannon was raised in Salt Lake City. In 1937, Cannon went on a mission for the LDS Church to Nazi Germany. He was president of a branch of the church in Berlin in 1939 when the LDS Church evacuated its missionaries from Europe at the beginning of World War II. Cannon finished his mission in", "id": "9582823" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\n. Callville was submerged when Lake Mead was filled. In 1869 and 1870, Cannon served a second mission in the Eastern United States. In April 1876, Cannon became president of the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. He served in this position until April 1, 1904. After his time as stake president, Cannon served as a patriarch in the church. Cannon was the mayor of St. George, Utah Territory in 1861 and 1862. In 1896, after Utah had become a U.S. state, he stood for election", "id": "7202652" }, { "contents": "Donald Q. Cannon\n\n\nDonald Quayle Cannon (born 1936) is a retired professor at Brigham Young University who specializes in Mormon history, particularly early Mormon history and international Mormon history. As a young man, Cannon was a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Germany. Cannon earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Utah. Cannon holds a Ph.D. from Clark University. In the late 1960s, he taught at the University of Southern Maine. In the LDS Church he has", "id": "10057919" }, { "contents": "George Goddard (Mormon)\n\n\nwas the clerk to LDS Church presiding bishop Edward Hunter. From 1874 to 1884, Goddard was the clerk of the LDS Church's biannual general conferences. In 1872, Goddard became the inaugural first assistant to George Q. Cannon, the first superintendent of the Deseret Sunday School Union. Goddard served in this capacity for 26 years, until his death in 1899. Goddard was also a member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and a patriarch in the church. He died in Salt Lake City and was buried at Salt Lake City Cemetery.", "id": "7701639" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nuntil their arrival in Utah. In 1854, Cannon went on a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to the Eastern United States, where he assisted John Taylor in publishing a periodical entitled \"The Mormon\". He also preached and baptized in Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware. Cannon returned to Utah Territory due to the troubles connected with the Utah War. In 1864, Cannon helped establish Call's Landing on the Colorado River, later known as Callville, Nevada", "id": "7202651" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nJanath Russell Cannon (October 28, 1918 – July 5, 2007) was a counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was also a prominent missionary in the church and was among the first to preach to black people in Africa. Born in Ogden, Utah, Janath Russell was educated at Wellesley College. In 1941, she married Edwin Q. Cannon in the Salt Lake Temple. From 1971 to 1974,", "id": "9582964" }, { "contents": "Joseph A. Cannon\n\n\nserved as an assistant administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from 1983 to 1985. Joseph A. Cannon was born on July 31, 1949. Cannon served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Ireland, including on the Isle of Man, the ancestral homeland of the Cannons. Cannon received a degree in political science and, in 1977, a law degree from Brigham Young University. Cannon served as a law clerk in Salt Lake City for U.S. District", "id": "7202830" }, { "contents": "Elaine A. Cannon\n\n\nElaine Anderson Cannon (April 9, 1922 – May 19, 2003) was the eighth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 to 1984. Cannon has been a writer and an editor and is the author of over 50 books. Elaine Anderson was born to Aldon Joseph and Minnie Egan Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a teenager, she started writing a daily column aimed at teenagers for the \"Deseret News\". She", "id": "1682052" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nAdele Morris Cannon Howells (January 11, 1886 – April 14, 1951) was the fourth general president of the Primary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1943 until her death of rheumatic heart disease. She contributed to \"The Children's Friend\" magazine, as well as the fundraising for the Children's Primary Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. Adele Morris Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to George Mousley Cannon and Marian Adelaide Morris. She", "id": "1336419" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\nGeorgius Young Cannon (March 6, 1892 – March 29, 1987) was a 20th-century architect in the American West who operated principally out of Salt Lake City, Utah. Cannon trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), graduating in 1918. He then joined the army and later returned to Utah to intern with the architectural firm Ware & Treganza and Cannon & Fetzer. He served two missions to Germany for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). For a time", "id": "12786285" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Quayle Cannon (January 11, 1827 – April 12, 1901) was an early member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), and served in the First Presidency under four successive presidents of the church: Brigham Young, John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. He was the church's chief political strategist, and was dubbed \"the Mormon premier\" and \"the Mormon Richelieu\" by the press. He was also a five", "id": "19825263" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nwas the oldest of nine children, and her father George Cannon was the first president of the Utah State Senate. As a child, Cannon suffered from rheumatic fever. She enjoyed reading in her spare time and horseback riding. She was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Cannon attended schools in Salt Lake City and graduated from the LDS High School and Business College in 1903. She attended the University of Utah and studied physical education and graduated with her bachelor's degree in 1909. Cannon", "id": "1336420" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nis one of the few general authorities of the LDS Church to have been excommunicated. From 1889 until 1892, Cannon was the editor of the \"Ogden Standard\". From October 1892 until April 1898, he was the editor in chief of the \"Deseret News\". After the Spanish–American War he returned to work at the \"Deseret News\" and served as an executive editor of the newspaper off-and-on until his death. He was much beloved by his co-workers. Cannon was a member", "id": "7202722" }, { "contents": "Tracy Y. Cannon\n\n\nLatter-day Saints. In 1939, he was made second assistant to Melvin J. Ballard, supervisor of the committee. From 1915 to 1927, Cannon was a member of the high council of the Pioneer Stake of the LDS Church. In 1917, he became a member of the Deseret Sunday School Union General Board. From 1930 through 1936, Cannon was bishop of the Cannon Ward in Salt Lake City. Cannon was an editor of the 1927 LDS Church hymnal. In 1925, Cannon was appointed director of the McCune School", "id": "12019030" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe church's Welsh-language periodical, \"Udgorn Seion\". From 1867 to 1874, Cannon was the managing editor of the \"Deseret News\". It was under his direction that the newspaper was first published on a daily basis. In 1866, Cannon began publication of a magazine for youth and young adult Latter-day Saints called \"The Juvenile Instructor\". He owned and published this magazine until his death; in 1901 his family sold the magazine to the LDS Church's Sunday School organization. The periodical was", "id": "19825272" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nCannon and her husband were heads of the Switzerland Mission of the LDS Church. Upon their return to Utah in 1974, Cannon became the first counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the church's Relief Society. Cannon served in this capacity until 1978, when she was released so that she and her husband could become the first missionaries of the church to preach in \"black Africa\". They — along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey — preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 27", "id": "9582965" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\nan LDS Church organization responsible for educating young members of the LDS church, and the magazine was the first church periodical oriented toward youth. Cannon opened the George Q. Cannon & Sons bookstore in 1867 to sell the magazine and other publications of an uplifting nature. Cannon believed that secular novels did not reflect Latter-day Saint values. In the 1880s, Cannon expanded with a branch in Ogden, Utah. It is not known how many books Cannon & Sons actually published itself. In this era, authors commonly self-published", "id": "18344085" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n. Cannon was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. Cannon fathered 32 children, some of whom are Abraham H. Cannon, John Q. Cannon, and Sylvester Q. Cannon, who all became general authorities of the LDS Church; Frank J. Cannon, Utah's first U.S. Senator; and Lewis T. Cannon and Georgius Y. Cannon, prominent architects in Utah. Some of Cannon's prominent descendants include Howard Cannon, U.S. Senator from Nevada from 1959 to 1983 and Chris Cannon, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1997 to", "id": "19825281" }, { "contents": "Salt Lake City Council Hall\n\n\nwho was then the official architect for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Built at First South and 120 East (more on Salt Lake City's coordinate system), sandstone for the structure was delivered from Red Butte Canyon on Utah's first chartered railroad. The well-furnished Greek revival building was completed at a cost of $70,000. In January 1866, City Hall was dedicated by George Q. Cannon, a prominent LDS leader. Many other LDS leaders attended the dedication including Brigham", "id": "19382830" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\n, Cannon moved to Los Angeles and worked as the office manager of his MIT schoolmate Wallace Neff. He later returned to Utah and designed numerous buildings, mostly residences, and some of which remain on the National Register of Historic Places. Among his works were meetinghouses of the LDS Church and other civic buildings. Cannon served on a church-appointed board of six architects that oversaw the construction of the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple. Cannon was the youngest of 32 children born to LDS Church leader George Q. Cannon. His mother,", "id": "12786286" }, { "contents": "Karl G. Maeser\n\n\nin the General Superintendency of the Deseret Sunday School Union. He was the Second Assistant to General Superintendent George Q. Cannon from July 1894 to January 1899. He then served as the First Assistant to Cannon from January 1899 until February 1901. Maeser also participated in the Utah constitutional convention after Abraham Smoot's death in 1895. He proposed an article to support prohibition, but later backed down. Missionaries from the LDS Church were removed from California in 1858 due to the Utah War. Missionary work resumed in 1892. Maeser presided over", "id": "11030473" }, { "contents": "Frank B. Woodbury\n\n\nFrank Bartlett Woodbury (December 27, 1867 – December 21, 1962) was a leader of and an Acting Presiding Patriarch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), one of only three church members to hold this position in church history. Born in St. George, Utah Territory, to Orin Nelson Woodbury and Ann Cannon, Woodbury served in many capacities in the church on a local level. Some, but not all, LDS Church sources list Woodbury as \"Acting Presiding Patriarch\" of", "id": "8238754" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand 1958 and served three full terms. From 1964 to 1971, Cannon was a bishop of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. From 1971 to 1974, he was the president of the Switzerland Mission of the church. In 1978, three weeks after the LDS Church announced that it would no longer impose restrictions of black people receiving the priesthood or participating in temple ordinances, Cannon traveled to Africa on behalf of the church with Merrill J. Bateman to assess the prospects for church missionary work and growth in \"black Africa\"", "id": "9582825" }, { "contents": "Amasa Lyman\n\n\n). Lyman served as the first mayor of San Bernardino. In 1860, Young appointed three of the twelve apostles—Lyman, Charles C. Rich, and George Q. Cannon—to the presidency of the church's European Mission. On March 16, 1862, Lyman preached a sermon in Dundee, Scotland, which all but denied the reality of and the necessity for the atonement of Jesus Christ, which is a central tenet of the LDS Church. His speech appeared to have been overlooked for years, but on January 21", "id": "12068047" }, { "contents": "Mark E. Petersen\n\n\nMark Edward Petersen (November 7, 1900 – January 11, 1984) was an American news editor and religious leader who served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1944 until his death. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, he filled the vacancy in the Quorum caused by the excommunication of Richard R. Lyman. Petersen had become managing editor of the church-owned \"Deseret News\" in 1935 and editor in 1941.", "id": "2692480" }, { "contents": "Thomas C. Griggs\n\n\nthe LDS Church's Aaronic priesthood; his call to this office was given by Apostle George Q. Cannon. With the outbreak of the American Civil War, the Griggs heeded the counsel of LDS Church leaders to move to Utah Territory. The Griggs crossed the plains in Joseph Horne's Mormon pioneer company in 1861. Griggs first joined the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in 1866 when Charles John Thomas was the director. Griggs would continue as a member of the choir until his death in 1903. While Robert Sands was the conductor of the choir", "id": "9481149" }, { "contents": "Charles Clarence Neslen\n\n\nfrom Germany and he was imprisoned in Danzig. He served as president of the Königsberg District of the LDS Church for a part of his mission. Neslen was a member of the Democratic Party and a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1912. Neslen worked a total of 15 years for the \"Deseret News\". He was also a realtor and for a time served as secretary of the Salt Lake Real Estate Association. On October 26, 1905, Neslen married Grace T. Cannon, a daughter of George Q. Cannon.", "id": "21092533" }, { "contents": "Stephen L. Chipman\n\n\nStephen L. Chipman (1864–1945) was a member of the Utah State Legislature in 1903 and a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Utah County. He was also the first president of the Salt Lake Temple who was not also an apostle in the LDS Church. Chipman studied at Brigham Young Academy (the predecessor of Brigham Young University (BYU)) as a youth. From 1885 to 1887 he served as a Mormon missionary in the Southern States Mission of the LDS Church", "id": "15228384" }, { "contents": "Mountain Meadows massacre and Mormon public relations\n\n\nCannon, then president of the LDS California Mission. In the October 13, 1857 edition of Cannon's San Francisco newspaper \"The Western Standard\", Cannon responded to initial news reports of involvement by Mormons by charging the responsible journalists with writing \"reckless and malignant slanders\", despite knowing that the southern Utah Mormons were \"as innocent of [the massacre] as the child unborn\". The church's official newspaper in Salt Lake City, \"The Deseret News\", was initially slow to comment on the massacre,", "id": "22212632" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas the second-most senior apostle of the church after the death of Woodruff, Cannon did not become President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, as would be the practice in the LDS Church today. Rather, because Cannon was a member of the First Presidency, the church simply appointed the next senior apostle of the church—Brigham Young, Jr.—to be the quorum president. (Under today's practices, Cannon would have been appointed the president of the quorum and Young would have been appointed acting president.) Cannon", "id": "19825274" }, { "contents": "Clifford E. Young\n\n\nClifford Earle Young (December 7, 1883 – August 21, 1958) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1941 until his death. Young was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, the son of LDS Church leader Seymour B. Young. From 1905 to 1908, he served as a Mormon missionary in England and Germany. In 1928, Young became the president of the Alpine Stake of the LDS Church in Utah. In 1934, he joined the", "id": "8315768" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n33. Upon his joining the Quorum of the Twelve, Cannon was called to preside over the church's European Mission. Cannon's mission in Europe ended when he was recalled by Young in 1862 to work in Washington, D.C., to assist in the church's promotion of Utah Territory's bid for statehood. At the adjournment of the 1862 congressional session, Cannon again left for Europe to preside over the mission. In this capacity, Cannon was the editor of the \"Millennial Star\" and, for a short time,", "id": "19825271" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nfrom the federal authorities. In September 1888, Cannon surrendered himself and pleaded guilty at trial to charges of unlawful cohabitation under the Edmunds Act. As a result, Cannon served nearly six months in Utah's federal penitentiary. Cannon was pardoned in 1894 by U.S. President Grover Cleveland. Cannon died on April 12, 1901, in Monterey, California, at 74 years of age. Had he lived a few months longer, he would have become the President of the LDS Church: Lorenzo Snow died on October 10 of that year", "id": "19825280" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Isle of Man\n\n\nand Idaho which descends from the 19th century marriage of George Cannon and Ann Quayle before their emigration from Peel, Isle of Man. The family's most notable member was their oldest son George Quayle Cannon. The family is connected by marriage to the Bennion, Taylor, Wells and Young political families. LDS Membership statistics as of January 1, 2011 for the Isle of Man. The nation of the Isle of Man does not have its own mission. Instead it is served by an English mission. Five out of the six", "id": "7797107" }, { "contents": "The Contributor (LDS magazine)\n\n\nThe Contributor was an independent publication associated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) between 1879 and 1896. It was a monthly periodical and sought to represent the Young Men's and Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Associations (YMMIA and YLMIA respectively), the youth organizations of the LDS Church at the time. It was founded by Junius F. Wells, the inaugural head of the YMMIA. Abraham H. Cannon became editor when the magazine was purchased by the Cannon Publishing Company in 1892. With the", "id": "505110" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe official organ of the Sunday School until 1930, when it was replaced with \"The Instructor\". Cannon also served as the first general superintendent of the church's Sunday School from 1867 until his death. On April 8, 1873, Cannon became a member of the church's First Presidency when he was called as the first counselor by Brigham Young. Cannon went on to serve as counselor to three more presidents of the church: he was First Counselor to John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. Although Cannon", "id": "19825273" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\ntogether. Prior to her service in the general Primary presidency, Clara Cannon was a counselor in the presidencies of the Primary and Relief Society in the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. When Louie B. Felt became the first general presidency of the Primary, Matilda M. Barratt and Cannon were selected as Felt's counselors. Cannon was a counselor until 1895; the next year she was succeeded in the position by Josephine R. West. Clara Moses Cannon died of throat cancer in Centerville, Utah, aged 87 and was interred in", "id": "10663424" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nScouts of America and served in the organization's Great Salt Lake Council. Prior to his call as a general authority, Cannon served in the church as a bishop, stake president, patriarch, temple sealer, and regional representative. He was also the president of the church's Central British Mission from 1966 to 1969. From 1969 to 1972, Cannon was an assistant and counselor to W. Jay Eldredge, the general superintendent of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association. Cannon became a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy", "id": "8339580" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe Nauvoo Legion. During this time, Cannon served as printer of the \"Deseret News\" while it was publishing in exile in Fillmore, Utah. After the Utah War, he was called as president of the church's Eastern States Mission. The murder of Parley P. Pratt in 1857 created a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. That vacancy was not filled until Brigham Young called Cannon to the apostleship three years later. Cannon was ordained to the priesthood office of apostle on August 26, 1860, at age", "id": "19825270" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nin the Sandwich Islands (later known as the Kingdom of Hawaii), where he served for four years. While in the islands, Cannon converted many Native Hawaiians. One of the most notable was Jonatana Napela, who assisted Cannon in translating the Book of Mormon into Hawaiian. Joseph F. Smith, a future church president, would follow Cannon and serve in Hawaii one year later. Returning to Utah Territory, Cannon married Elizabeth Hoagland (daughter of Abraham Hoagland and his wife.) He was almost immediately called to assist apostle", "id": "19825268" }, { "contents": "Ronald E. Poelman\n\n\nRonald Eugene Poelman (May 10, 1928 – November 19, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 until his death. In 1984, he delivered a controversial sermon in the LDS Church's general conference which the church redacted before publishing. Poelman was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to a Latter-day Saint family. As a young man, he served as a Mormon missionary in the LDS Church's Netherlands Mission. He began his", "id": "4765396" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\n. He would marry Martha Brown of Ogden in 1878. In 1891 he helped to organize the Utah Republican Party. After a failed bid to become delegate from the Utah Territory, he succeeded and served from March 4, 1895, to January 4, 1896. Cannon was chosen in 1896 to serve as senator by the Utah Legislature in spite of LDS church leadership favoring his father for the job. He served in the United States Senate, initially, as a member of the Republican Party; however, he later became a", "id": "11000346" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nmember of the Silver Republican Party, founded by his successor (and future employer at \"The Salt Lake Tribune\") Thomas Kearns. Cannon lost re-election in 1899. Utah's state legislators indicated they would not support Cannon for re-election shortly after the November 1898 elections. Cannon had voted against the Dingley Act, which would have raised tariffs on sugar and helped the Utah sugar industry. It was strongly supported by the LDS Church hierarchy, who now opposed his re-election. Other factors were his support", "id": "11000347" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand Ghana. The first convert baptized in Africa was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and his wife were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' centre in Nauvoo, Illinois. For three months in 1989, Cannon was the interim president of the LDS Church's Germany Hamburg Mission; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. After his interim service as mission president, Cannon was the second president of the Frankfurt Germany Temple from 1989 to", "id": "9582827" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nCounselor to William B. Preston, the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church; he served in this position between 1884 and 1886. In 1884, shortly after Cannon had become a general authority, a sensationalized news story by Joseph Lippman in the \"Salt Lake Tribune\" alleged that Cannon had taken his wife's sister Louie Wells as a plural wife. Lippman suggested that Cannon and Wells had been married in the Logan Temple. In fact, there had been no such marriage, though it was later revealed that Cannon and Wells had", "id": "7202724" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nbranches of the LDS Church in Nigeria and Ghana. The first convert baptized in Nigeria was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and her husband were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' center in Nauvoo, Illinois. In 1989, they served as interim leaders of the Germany Hamburg Mission of the church; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. From 1989 to 1992, Cannon was the matron of the Frankfurt Germany Temple while her husband", "id": "9582966" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\n's Quorum of the Twelve. Abraham was a son of George Q. Cannon, an early member of the church's First Presidency. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary in the church's Central States Mission. After his mission, he served in the United States Air Force during the Second World War. In 1946, he began attending Brigham Young University (BYU). After graduating from BYU, Cannon became a vice president of Beneficial Life Insurance Company in Salt Lake City. He was active in the Boy", "id": "8339579" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\n1925, Cannon became the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church, succeeding Charles W. Nibley. Cannon's counselors were David A. Smith and John Wells. In 1938, Cannon was released as Presiding Bishop and was succeeded by LeGrand Richards. At the same time, Cannon was ordained an apostle and made an \"associate\" of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, a unique position that had never been filled before. When Quorum member Melvin J. Ballard died the next year, Cannon became a full member of the Quorum; he served", "id": "2194374" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\nClarissa Cordelia (\"Clara\") Moses Cannon (April 21, 1839 – August 21, 1926) was a Mormon pioneer and a member of the first-ever general presidency of the Primary organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). She was the second counselor to general president Louie B. Felt from 1880 to 1895. Clara Moses was born in Westfield, Massachusetts. In 1846 she took the six-month journey on the ship \"Brooklyn\" from New York City to San", "id": "10663422" }, { "contents": "Leonora Cannon Taylor\n\n\nLeonora Cannon Taylor (October 6, 1796–December 9, 1868) was a member of the Relief Society organization at the time of its origin and the first wife of John Taylor, the third president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). On October 6, 1796 in Peel, Isle of Man, Leonora Cannon was born to George Cannon and Leonora Callister. As the oldest daughter in the family, when Leonora's father died when she was thirteen she went away to London to work", "id": "16190675" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\ntheir books, which were then distributed by others. However, Cannon & Sons distributed several important books through their stores and mail order (see table). The company had extensive ties to the LDS Church-owned newspaper, the \"Deseret News.\" Five of Cannon's sons held important positions in the paper, and Cannon himself was editor between 1867 and 1872, and again while temporarily owning the paper from 1892 to 1898. Nearly every George Q. Cannon & Sons book was printed on the \"Deseret News\" press", "id": "18344086" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nof the Utah Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Cannon was the oldest son of George Q. Cannon and the one most expected to follow in his prominent father's footsteps in politics, church office, and journalism. Heber J. Grant once said of Cannon: \"There probably is not a young man in the church who had had more opportunities and advantages extended to him educationally, spiritually, and every other way than John Q. Cannon.\" At the age of 27, Cannon was called to serve as the Second", "id": "7202723" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nMartha Maria \"Mattie\" Hughes Cannon (July 1, 1857 – July 10, 1932) was a Welsh-born immigrant to the United States, a polygamous wife, physician, Utah women's rights advocate and suffragist, and Utah State Senator. Her family immigrated to the United States as converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and traveled West to settle in Utah territory with other Mormons. She started working at the age of fourteen. At sixteen she enrolled in the University", "id": "15993465" }, { "contents": "Church Office Building\n\n\nThe Church Office Building is a 28-story building in Salt Lake City, Utah, which houses the administrative support staff for the lay ministry of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) throughout the world. The building is 420 ft (128 m) tall at roof level and is located within the Temple Square complex on the corner of North Temple and State Street. The building was designed by George Cannon Young at a cost of US$31 million to build. Construction took place from 1962 to 1972", "id": "13754819" }, { "contents": "John Lyman Smith\n\n\nJohn Lyman Smith (November 17, 1828 – February 21, 1898) was an American politician and Mormon missionary. He served as a member of the Utah Territory's Legislative Assembly's House of Representatives for Iron County, Utah, from 1852 to 1853, and the Great Salt Lake County, Utah, from 1853 to 1855. Cousin of the founder of the Latter Day Saint Movement, Joseph Smith, Smith was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) who traveled to the", "id": "18219861" }, { "contents": "Francis M. Lyman\n\n\nFrancis Marion Lyman (January 12, 1840 – November 18, 1916) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was the President of the Quorum from 1903 until his death. Lyman's father and son were also apostles in the church: his father was Amasa M. Lyman and his son was Richard R. Lyman. Both his father and son were excommunicated from the church while serving as apostles. Francis M. Lyman was born as", "id": "20761093" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nAngus Munn Cannon (May 17, 1834 – June 7, 1915) was an early Latter Day Saint leader and Mormon pioneer. Cannon was born in Liverpool, Lancashire, England. His Manx parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 1840, being baptized by his uncle John Taylor. In 1842, the Cannon family went to Nauvoo, Illinois, United States. By 1849, they were in Utah Territory. Cannon was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon and their lives followed very similar paths up", "id": "7202650" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\naffairs while Taylor recovered. This training would serve him well in later life. Cannon's father died in 1845. In 1846, Taylor traveled to England to organize the affairs of the church after Smith's death. Meanwhile, Cannon accompanied Taylor's wife and family as they moved to Winter Quarters, Nebraska. When Taylor returned, Cannon traveled with the entire Taylor family to the Salt Lake Valley, arriving in October 1847. In 1849, Cannon was asked by church president Brigham Young to serve as a missionary for the church", "id": "19825267" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nstaying in the position until December 31, 1903. Cannon attempted to prohibit children not vaccinated from attending school in case of a disease outbreak. The Board of Health sent out vaccines; however, the \"Deseret News\" spread information that vaccines weren't safe. LDS Church leaders were divided on the subject. One apostle, Brigham Young Jr. was very vocal in his opinions, writing in the \"Deseret News\" about the evils of vaccinations. The influence of the \"Deseret News\" and Mormon religious leaders limited how many", "id": "15993490" }, { "contents": "Billy Johnson (Mormon)\n\n\nLDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball announced Official Declaration 2 which extended the priesthood to all worthy male members of the church regardless of race or color. In gratitude, Johnson sent a letter to Kimball, explaining that God had prepared the people in Ghana, asking him to send missionaries to the members. Kimball responded to his pleas and sent the first called missionaries Rendell N. Mabey and Rachel Mabey. They joined Edwin Q. Cannon and Janath R. Cannon. Johnson was finally baptized into the LDS Church on December 9, 1978. He", "id": "4108521" }, { "contents": "Juvenile Instructor\n\n\ncatechisms on the Bible, Book of Mormon, and Doctrine and Covenants; musical compositions; illustrations; stories; editorial teachings; and other aids to gospel instruction. It was the first magazine for children published in the United States west of the Mississippi River. For much of its history, \"The Juvenile Instructor\" was owned by the Cannon family. Its first editor was George Q. Cannon, an apostle in the LDS Church. Cannon and his family continued to publish the magazine privately until January 1, 1901, when the", "id": "9210614" }, { "contents": "Joseph F. Smith\n\n\nand as second counselor to Lorenzo Snow (1898–1901). Smith was appointed first counselor to Snow on the death of first counselor George Q. Cannon, but, as Snow himself died only four days later, Smith never served in that position. He succeeded Snow as president of the LDS Church and president of the Salt Lake Temple. He served as president of the temple until 1911, when he transferred the responsibility to Anthon H. Lund. Smith also served as editor of the \"Improvement Era\" and \"Juvenile Instructor\",", "id": "4117444" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in California\n\n\nQ. Cannon began publication in San Francisco of the \"Western Standard\", a weekly periodical supportive of the Church. The first colonization from Utah to California came in 1851 when a company of about 450 saints and slaves under direction of Elders Amasa M. Lyman and Charles C. Rich of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles settled at what is now San Bernardino. The colony was the final settlement in a string of Mormon communities extending from Salt Lake City in an area known as Deseret. The community thrived, and on July 6,", "id": "22187256" }, { "contents": "Sunday School (LDS Church)\n\n\nout. On November 11, 1867, Young and church leaders Daniel H. Wells, George A. Smith, Wilford Woodruff, George Q. Cannon, and Brigham Young, Jr. met and organized the Parent Sunday School Union. Young appointed Cannon as the first general superintendent of the Sunday School, a position he would hold until his death in 1901. In 1872, the Sunday School organization was renamed the Deseret Sunday School Union. The organized Sunday School addressed lesson topics and source materials, grading, prizes and rewards, use of hymns", "id": "8671425" }, { "contents": "Hugh W. Pinnock\n\n\nHugh Wallace Pinnock (January 15, 1934 – December 16, 2000) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Pinnock was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Western States Mission. Pinnock graduated from University of Utah in 1958, where he became a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity and Owl and Key. Prior to his call to the First", "id": "8519001" }, { "contents": "Charles W. Penrose\n\n\nwas organized Penrose was called as a member of the high council. In 1877, Penrose became the assistant editor of the LDS Church-owned \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, working under George Q. Cannon. Penrose was known for his writing, including missionary tracts and lyrics of Latter-day Saint hymns, including \"God of Our Fathers\", \"O Ye Mountains High\", and \"Up, Awake, Ye Defenders of Zion\". In 1880, Penrose became the editor-in-chief of", "id": "2194239" }, { "contents": "Rulon S. Wells\n\n\nRulon Seymour Wells (July 7, 1854 – May 7, 1941) was a Utah politician and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1893 until his death. Wells was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to LDS Church leader Daniel H. Wells (1814–1891) and Louisa Free (1824–1886). In 1875, Wells travelled to Europe as a Mormon missionary and worked primarily in Germany and Switzerland. He returned to the United States in 1877. On", "id": "8315459" }, { "contents": "G. Homer Durham\n\n\nGeorge Homer Durham (February 4, 1911 – January 10, 1985) was an American academic administrator and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Durham was born in Parowan, Utah, and was raised in Salt Lake City. As a boy in grade school, he met and became lifelong friends with future LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley. As a young man, Durham served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the British", "id": "21588256" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nJonatana Napela or Jonathan Hawaii Napela (first name also spelled Iohatana, full name Napelakapuonamahanaonaleleonalani) (September 11, 1813 – August 6, 1879) was one of the earliest Hawaiian converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Hawaii, joining in the 1830s. He helped translate the Book of Mormon into the Hawaiian language, as \"Ka Buke a Moramona,\" working with missionary George Q. Cannon. Napela was appointed to serve as a superintendent of the colony at Kalaupapa, Molokai", "id": "16647246" }, { "contents": "Richfield, Utah\n\n\nserves about 600 students per year. As in most settled areas of rural Utah, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) plays a prominent role. The Mormons were highly industrious colonizers. From 1847, when they founded Salt Lake City, until 1877, they founded 360 towns. Following direction from Brigham Young, Latter-day Saints founded the town and outlying hamlets about 150 years ago. Members of the LDS Church are predominant among the residents. Even in this heart of Mormon country,", "id": "11082836" }, { "contents": "Marvin O. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Owen Ashton (April 8, 1883 – October 7, 1946) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1938 until his death. Prior to becoming a general authority, Ashton was a prominent local leader of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City, Utah. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Mormon parents. He married Rachel Grace Jeremy in 1906 and in 1907 went to England as a missionary for the LDS Church. He returned", "id": "14505232" }, { "contents": "LeGrand Richards\n\n\nLeGrand Richards (February 6, 1886 – January 11, 1983) was a prominent missionary and leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He served as the seventh presiding bishop of the LDS Church from 1938 to 1952, and was then called as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles by church president David O. McKay. Richards served in the Quorum of the Twelve until his death in Salt Lake City, Utah, at the age of 96. Richards was born in", "id": "2294374" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nwas educated at Lahainaluna School. Napela was trained as a lawyer. He was serving as a judge in Wailuku, Hawaii, when he met American George Q. Cannon, a member of the LDS Church on a missionary trip to Hawaii. After Napela's conversion in the 1830s to the LDS Church, the government forced the judge to resign from his position. The LDS Church was regarded with suspicion. LDS Church historian Andrew Jensen said that Napela \"did splendid missionary work for the Church.\" Napela was sent on a specific", "id": "16647248" }, { "contents": "Gardo House\n\n\ncounselor George Q. Cannon and other church leaders suggested that Taylor occupy the Gardo House after its completion, but he repeatedly refused. However, when church members unanimously voted on April 9, 1879, to make the Gardo House the official parsonage for LDS Church presidents, Taylor reluctantly accepted their decision. Moses Thatcher, William Jennings, and Angus M. Cannon were appointed as a committee to oversee completion of the mansion. On December 27, 1881, the Deseret News published a letter from John Taylor announcing a public reception and tour of", "id": "1496184" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nStates Mission of the church in 1901. In 1902, Grant married George J. Cannon. In 1923, Cannon was asked to succeed Mae Taylor Nystrom as the second counselor to Martha Horne Tingey, the general president of what was then called the Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Association. In 1929, when Ruth May Fox succeeded Tingey, Cannon was asked to be her first counselor. Cannon served in this capacity until 1929, when Fox was released and Cannon was selected by her father, who was President of the Church, to", "id": "1681854" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\n. (At the time, Cannon was a counselor to James E. Faust in the church's International Mission, which had jurisdiction over all areas of the world not otherwise part of a mission.) After Bateman and Cannon reported the results of their trip, Cannon and his wife were called and set apart as the first Mormon missionaries to black Africa. They—along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey—preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 35 branches and 5 districts of the LDS Church in Nigeria", "id": "9582826" }, { "contents": "Marion D. Hanks\n\n\nMarion Duff Hanks (October 13, 1921 – August 5, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1953 until his death. Hanks was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man he served in the Northern States Mission of the LDS Church, which was headquartered in Chicago. He was in the United States Navy during World War II and received a J.D. from the University of Utah. Prior to his call as a general authority", "id": "6558935" }, { "contents": "Lillie T. Freeze\n\n\nthe Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association (YLMIA). In this capacity, she was invited to speak at the Salt Lake Tabernacle on April 6, 1880, at a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the LDS Church's founding. In 1880, Lillie Freeze was one of the founding members of the LDS Church's Primary Association. Freeze was appointed as the first secretary of the general presidency, which was composed of Louie B. Felt, Matilda M. Barratt, and Clara C. M. Cannon. Freeze was secretary until 1888, when", "id": "10906695" }, { "contents": "Henry D. Taylor\n\n\nHenry Dixon Taylor (November 22, 1903 – February 24, 1987) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1958 until his death. Taylor was born in Provo, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Eastern States Mission. During his mission, Taylor was the president of the church's Connecticut District. Taylor received a bachelor's degree from Brigham Young University (BYU) and a master's degree", "id": "2477100" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas elected to be the non-voting delegate for Utah Territory in the United States Congress in 1872. He remained a congressional delegate until 1882, when his seat was declared vacant by the enactment of the Edmunds Act, which terminated many political and civil rights for Utah's Mormon polygamists. By 1880, Cannon had served four terms in Congress as Territorial Delegate. The newly appointed anti-Mormon territorial governor, Eli Houston Murray, openly supported the Liberal Party, which generally opposed church candidates. The 1880 territory-wide election", "id": "19825275" }, { "contents": "George F. Richards\n\n\nGeorge Franklin Richards (February 23, 1861 – August 8, 1950) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from April 9, 1906 until his death. He also served as Acting Presiding Patriarch of the LDS Church from 1937 to 1942 and President of the Quorum of the Twelve from May 25, 1945 until his death. Richards was born in Farmington, Utah Territory, the son of Franklin D. Richards and Nanny Longstroth. Richards", "id": "2194252" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\n1882, at the age of 23, Cannon assumed business control of the \"Juvenile Instructor\" and associated publications. He continued his management until his death. In October 1892, Cannon and his brother John Q. Cannon took control of the \"Deseret News\" publishing. He also became the editor and publisher of \"The Contributor\". On October 9, 1882, Cannon became a member of the First Seven Presidents of the Seventy of the church. On October 7, 1889, church president Wilford Woodruff named Cannon a member", "id": "9035316" }, { "contents": "Howard Cannon\n\n\nHis grandfather David Cannon, was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon, and a leading figure in the building of the St. George Temple, who was later the third president of that temple. His father Walter Cannon was one of David Cannon's 31 children. Howard's parents had married in 1909, his mother was Leah Sullivan. When Cannon was two years old his father left for England to served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for two years. Cannon went to Woodward School in", "id": "18060013" }, { "contents": "Mormon fiction\n\n\nMormons were generally non-fiction, including scripture, missionary tracts, and doctrinal literature. In 1844, Parley P. Pratt published what is commonly cited as the first work of LDS fiction, the didactic \"Dialogue between Joseph Smith and the Devil\". It was first published in the New York Herald. Early Mormon leaders like Brigham Young and George Q. Cannon condemned novels for wasting time, a rhetoric that persisted until the 1880s. Fiction among LDS Church members developed once the Mormons had settled in Utah and developed a degree of", "id": "453087" }, { "contents": "Marvin J. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Jeremy Ashton (May 6, 1915 – February 25, 1994) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1971 until his death. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was the son of Marvin O. Ashton, a local LDS leader, who later became a church general authority. The younger Ashton worked in the lumber business as a youth. He graduated from the University of Utah. He served a", "id": "19825413" }, { "contents": "Rudger Clawson\n\n\nRudger Judd Clawson (March 12, 1857 – June 21, 1943) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1898 until his death in 1943. He also served as President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1921 until his death and as a member of the First Presidency of the LDS Church for five days in 1901. Clawson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to Hiram Bradley Clawson and Margaret Judd", "id": "9035430" }, { "contents": "Utah-Idaho Sugar Company\n\n\npayment and a $130,000 loan. Cutler also went to Chicago and New York City to secure loans from banks; he came back, via train, with a bag full of money, as he did not think any banks in Utah could have cashed the large bank draft. The LDS church made more payments and secured more loans. In addition, George Q. Cannon and Heber J. Grant personally funded the enterprise. Joseph F. Smith, president of the LDS Church, gave a sermon in 1893 explaining that this was done to", "id": "1319991" }, { "contents": "President of the Church (LDS Church)\n\n\nthe President of the Quorum. When Woodruff died, his counselors returned to the Quorum based on the date they were ordained an apostle, placing George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith below Brigham Young Jr. and John Willard Young. Heber J. Grant objected to that arguing that seniority should be based on ordination to the Quorum rather than ordination as an apostle. Young argued that an apostle should not be demoted as long as he is worthy of the position. On March 31, 1900, Snow met with his counselors, Cannon and", "id": "16343191" }, { "contents": "Alfred W. McCune\n\n\n. Judge Orlando Powers, Associate Justice of the Utah Supreme Court, said in 1906 that he understood that McCune was not a Mormon. Frank J. Cannon, too, claimed McCune was not a Mormon, and B. H. Roberts, LDS Church historian and member of the First Council of the Seventy, said in 1930 that McCune was not a church member. Historian Orvin Malmquist, however, says that church records show he was baptized into the LDS Church at the age of eight in 1857, and that his marriage to Elizabeth", "id": "15062757" } ]
Joseph Jenne Cannon ( May 22 , 1877 -- November 5 , 1945 ) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ( LDS Church ) . He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family . As a young man , Cannon served as a for the LDS Church in Europe . He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903 . Lyman and Cannon also similarly dedicated Finland in 1903 . In the 1908 election , Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from . He served one term , from 1909 to 1911 . Cannon was not formally associated with any political party . From 1931 to 1934 , Cannon was the editor of the Deseret News , a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church . His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church 's British Mission . Cannon served in this capacity for three years , until 1937 . Immediately following his return to Utah , Cannon was asked to become the first assistant to [START_ENT] George Q. Morris [END_ENT] , the general superintendent of the church 's . Cannon served in this capacity until his death from pancreatic cancer
37e0be63-ec2e-46e4-9568-a6101c1feabb_Joseph_J._Canno:15
[{"answer": "George Q. Morris", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "1072725", "title": "George Q. Morris"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nJoseph Jenne Cannon (May 22, 1877 – November 5, 1945) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Europe. He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in St. Petersburg and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903. Lyman and Cannon", "id": "13710370" }, { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nalso similarly dedicated Finland in 1903. In the 1908 election, Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. He served one term, from 1909 to 1911. Cannon was not formally associated with any political party. From 1931 to 1934, Cannon was the editor of the \"Deseret News\", a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church. His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church's British Mission. Cannon served in this", "id": "13710371" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nSylvester Quayle Cannon (June 10, 1877 – May 29, 1943) was an American businessman, engineer, and religious leader who served as the sixth presiding bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1925 to 1938 and a member of church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1939 until his death. He was the son of George Q. Cannon, an apostle and member of the church's First Presidency. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. He studied", "id": "2194372" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nJohn Quayle Cannon (April 19, 1857 – January 14, 1931) was an editor-in-chief of the \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, Utah, and a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He also served as a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army during the Spanish–American War. He was the son of LDS Church apostle George Q. Cannon and Elizabeth Hoagland. He was married to Elizabeth \"Annie\" Wells Cannon. Cannon", "id": "7202721" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nFrank Jenne Cannon (January 25, 1859July 25, 1933) was the first United States Senator from Utah, who served from 1896 to 1899. Born in Salt Lake City, he was the eldest child of Sarah Jenne Cannon and George Q. Cannon. His father was an Apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and later was a member of its First Presidency. After attending the school in Salt Lake City, he studied at University of Deseret, graduating at the age of 19", "id": "11000345" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nEdwin Quayle \"Ted\" Cannon, Jr. (May 6, 1918 – April 6, 2005) was a Utah politician and businessman and was a prominent leader and missionary in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was among the first missionaries in the LDS Church to preach to black people in Africa and was part of the first group missionaries sent to establish official congregations of the LDS Church in West Africa. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Edwin Q. Cannon,", "id": "9582822" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Ivins Cannon (March 9, 1920 – August 4, 2009) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1986 to 1991. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, Cannon was the son of George J. Cannon and Lucy Grant Cannon, a leader of the youth in the LDS Church. His maternal grandfather was Heber J. Grant, the seventh president of the LDS Church. His paternal grandfather was Abraham H. Cannon, who was a member of the church", "id": "8339578" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nLucy Grant Cannon (October 22, 1880 – May 7, 1966) was the fourth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1937 to 1948. She was a member of the general presidency of the Young Women from 1923 to 1948, serving as a counselor to two presidents. Lucy Grant was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Lucy Stringham and LDS Church apostle Heber J. Grant. She served as a church missionary in the Western", "id": "1681853" }, { "contents": "George Mousley Cannon\n\n\nTrust Company. He served as a delegate to the 1895 Utah State Constitutional Convention and chaired the committee which formulated the articles on taxation and public debt. In 1896, Cannon was elected to the Utah State Senate and served as its first president. When The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) modified stake boundaries in 1900, dividing the new Granite Stake off from the Salt Lake Stake, Cannon became the Sunday School Superintendent of the new stake. From 1901 until after 1930, Cannon served as", "id": "8629874" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nat the University of Utah and then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received a B.S. degree in mining engineering. In 1899, Cannon began an LDS Church mission in Belgium. Cannon then served from 1900 to 1902 as president of the church's Netherlands–Belgium Mission. Cannon also served as Francis M. Lyman's secretary on a three-month trip to many nations along the Mediterranean and in the Middle East. From 1916 to 1925, Cannon served as president of the Pioneer Stake in Salt Lake City. In", "id": "2194373" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\nAbraham Hoagland Cannon (also reported as Abram H. Cannon) (March 12, 1859 – July 19, 1896) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. His parents were George Q. Cannon, a Latter Day Saints apostle, and Elizabeth Hoagland, daughter of Abraham Hoagland. Cannon studied at Deseret University. Later, he studied architecture under Obed Taylor. Cannon married Sarah A.", "id": "9035314" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nSr. and Luella Wareing. He was born at his parents' home because of the 1918 influenza pandemic. Cannon's paternal grandfather was George Q. Cannon, a Mormon pioneer and prominent leader in the LDS Church. Cannon was raised in Salt Lake City. In 1937, Cannon went on a mission for the LDS Church to Nazi Germany. He was president of a branch of the church in Berlin in 1939 when the LDS Church evacuated its missionaries from Europe at the beginning of World War II. Cannon finished his mission in", "id": "9582823" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\n. Callville was submerged when Lake Mead was filled. In 1869 and 1870, Cannon served a second mission in the Eastern United States. In April 1876, Cannon became president of the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. He served in this position until April 1, 1904. After his time as stake president, Cannon served as a patriarch in the church. Cannon was the mayor of St. George, Utah Territory in 1861 and 1862. In 1896, after Utah had become a U.S. state, he stood for election", "id": "7202652" }, { "contents": "Donald Q. Cannon\n\n\nDonald Quayle Cannon (born 1936) is a retired professor at Brigham Young University who specializes in Mormon history, particularly early Mormon history and international Mormon history. As a young man, Cannon was a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Germany. Cannon earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Utah. Cannon holds a Ph.D. from Clark University. In the late 1960s, he taught at the University of Southern Maine. In the LDS Church he has", "id": "10057919" }, { "contents": "George Goddard (Mormon)\n\n\nwas the clerk to LDS Church presiding bishop Edward Hunter. From 1874 to 1884, Goddard was the clerk of the LDS Church's biannual general conferences. In 1872, Goddard became the inaugural first assistant to George Q. Cannon, the first superintendent of the Deseret Sunday School Union. Goddard served in this capacity for 26 years, until his death in 1899. Goddard was also a member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and a patriarch in the church. He died in Salt Lake City and was buried at Salt Lake City Cemetery.", "id": "7701639" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nuntil their arrival in Utah. In 1854, Cannon went on a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to the Eastern United States, where he assisted John Taylor in publishing a periodical entitled \"The Mormon\". He also preached and baptized in Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware. Cannon returned to Utah Territory due to the troubles connected with the Utah War. In 1864, Cannon helped establish Call's Landing on the Colorado River, later known as Callville, Nevada", "id": "7202651" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nJanath Russell Cannon (October 28, 1918 – July 5, 2007) was a counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was also a prominent missionary in the church and was among the first to preach to black people in Africa. Born in Ogden, Utah, Janath Russell was educated at Wellesley College. In 1941, she married Edwin Q. Cannon in the Salt Lake Temple. From 1971 to 1974,", "id": "9582964" }, { "contents": "Joseph A. Cannon\n\n\nserved as an assistant administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from 1983 to 1985. Joseph A. Cannon was born on July 31, 1949. Cannon served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Ireland, including on the Isle of Man, the ancestral homeland of the Cannons. Cannon received a degree in political science and, in 1977, a law degree from Brigham Young University. Cannon served as a law clerk in Salt Lake City for U.S. District", "id": "7202830" }, { "contents": "Elaine A. Cannon\n\n\nElaine Anderson Cannon (April 9, 1922 – May 19, 2003) was the eighth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 to 1984. Cannon has been a writer and an editor and is the author of over 50 books. Elaine Anderson was born to Aldon Joseph and Minnie Egan Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a teenager, she started writing a daily column aimed at teenagers for the \"Deseret News\". She", "id": "1682052" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nAdele Morris Cannon Howells (January 11, 1886 – April 14, 1951) was the fourth general president of the Primary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1943 until her death of rheumatic heart disease. She contributed to \"The Children's Friend\" magazine, as well as the fundraising for the Children's Primary Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. Adele Morris Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to George Mousley Cannon and Marian Adelaide Morris. She", "id": "1336419" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\nGeorgius Young Cannon (March 6, 1892 – March 29, 1987) was a 20th-century architect in the American West who operated principally out of Salt Lake City, Utah. Cannon trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), graduating in 1918. He then joined the army and later returned to Utah to intern with the architectural firm Ware & Treganza and Cannon & Fetzer. He served two missions to Germany for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). For a time", "id": "12786285" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Quayle Cannon (January 11, 1827 – April 12, 1901) was an early member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), and served in the First Presidency under four successive presidents of the church: Brigham Young, John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. He was the church's chief political strategist, and was dubbed \"the Mormon premier\" and \"the Mormon Richelieu\" by the press. He was also a five", "id": "19825263" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nwas the oldest of nine children, and her father George Cannon was the first president of the Utah State Senate. As a child, Cannon suffered from rheumatic fever. She enjoyed reading in her spare time and horseback riding. She was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Cannon attended schools in Salt Lake City and graduated from the LDS High School and Business College in 1903. She attended the University of Utah and studied physical education and graduated with her bachelor's degree in 1909. Cannon", "id": "1336420" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nis one of the few general authorities of the LDS Church to have been excommunicated. From 1889 until 1892, Cannon was the editor of the \"Ogden Standard\". From October 1892 until April 1898, he was the editor in chief of the \"Deseret News\". After the Spanish–American War he returned to work at the \"Deseret News\" and served as an executive editor of the newspaper off-and-on until his death. He was much beloved by his co-workers. Cannon was a member", "id": "7202722" }, { "contents": "Tracy Y. Cannon\n\n\nLatter-day Saints. In 1939, he was made second assistant to Melvin J. Ballard, supervisor of the committee. From 1915 to 1927, Cannon was a member of the high council of the Pioneer Stake of the LDS Church. In 1917, he became a member of the Deseret Sunday School Union General Board. From 1930 through 1936, Cannon was bishop of the Cannon Ward in Salt Lake City. Cannon was an editor of the 1927 LDS Church hymnal. In 1925, Cannon was appointed director of the McCune School", "id": "12019030" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe church's Welsh-language periodical, \"Udgorn Seion\". From 1867 to 1874, Cannon was the managing editor of the \"Deseret News\". It was under his direction that the newspaper was first published on a daily basis. In 1866, Cannon began publication of a magazine for youth and young adult Latter-day Saints called \"The Juvenile Instructor\". He owned and published this magazine until his death; in 1901 his family sold the magazine to the LDS Church's Sunday School organization. The periodical was", "id": "19825272" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nCannon and her husband were heads of the Switzerland Mission of the LDS Church. Upon their return to Utah in 1974, Cannon became the first counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the church's Relief Society. Cannon served in this capacity until 1978, when she was released so that she and her husband could become the first missionaries of the church to preach in \"black Africa\". They — along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey — preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 27", "id": "9582965" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\nan LDS Church organization responsible for educating young members of the LDS church, and the magazine was the first church periodical oriented toward youth. Cannon opened the George Q. Cannon & Sons bookstore in 1867 to sell the magazine and other publications of an uplifting nature. Cannon believed that secular novels did not reflect Latter-day Saint values. In the 1880s, Cannon expanded with a branch in Ogden, Utah. It is not known how many books Cannon & Sons actually published itself. In this era, authors commonly self-published", "id": "18344085" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n. Cannon was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. Cannon fathered 32 children, some of whom are Abraham H. Cannon, John Q. Cannon, and Sylvester Q. Cannon, who all became general authorities of the LDS Church; Frank J. Cannon, Utah's first U.S. Senator; and Lewis T. Cannon and Georgius Y. Cannon, prominent architects in Utah. Some of Cannon's prominent descendants include Howard Cannon, U.S. Senator from Nevada from 1959 to 1983 and Chris Cannon, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1997 to", "id": "19825281" }, { "contents": "Salt Lake City Council Hall\n\n\nwho was then the official architect for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Built at First South and 120 East (more on Salt Lake City's coordinate system), sandstone for the structure was delivered from Red Butte Canyon on Utah's first chartered railroad. The well-furnished Greek revival building was completed at a cost of $70,000. In January 1866, City Hall was dedicated by George Q. Cannon, a prominent LDS leader. Many other LDS leaders attended the dedication including Brigham", "id": "19382830" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\n, Cannon moved to Los Angeles and worked as the office manager of his MIT schoolmate Wallace Neff. He later returned to Utah and designed numerous buildings, mostly residences, and some of which remain on the National Register of Historic Places. Among his works were meetinghouses of the LDS Church and other civic buildings. Cannon served on a church-appointed board of six architects that oversaw the construction of the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple. Cannon was the youngest of 32 children born to LDS Church leader George Q. Cannon. His mother,", "id": "12786286" }, { "contents": "Karl G. Maeser\n\n\nin the General Superintendency of the Deseret Sunday School Union. He was the Second Assistant to General Superintendent George Q. Cannon from July 1894 to January 1899. He then served as the First Assistant to Cannon from January 1899 until February 1901. Maeser also participated in the Utah constitutional convention after Abraham Smoot's death in 1895. He proposed an article to support prohibition, but later backed down. Missionaries from the LDS Church were removed from California in 1858 due to the Utah War. Missionary work resumed in 1892. Maeser presided over", "id": "11030473" }, { "contents": "Frank B. Woodbury\n\n\nFrank Bartlett Woodbury (December 27, 1867 – December 21, 1962) was a leader of and an Acting Presiding Patriarch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), one of only three church members to hold this position in church history. Born in St. George, Utah Territory, to Orin Nelson Woodbury and Ann Cannon, Woodbury served in many capacities in the church on a local level. Some, but not all, LDS Church sources list Woodbury as \"Acting Presiding Patriarch\" of", "id": "8238754" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand 1958 and served three full terms. From 1964 to 1971, Cannon was a bishop of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. From 1971 to 1974, he was the president of the Switzerland Mission of the church. In 1978, three weeks after the LDS Church announced that it would no longer impose restrictions of black people receiving the priesthood or participating in temple ordinances, Cannon traveled to Africa on behalf of the church with Merrill J. Bateman to assess the prospects for church missionary work and growth in \"black Africa\"", "id": "9582825" }, { "contents": "Amasa Lyman\n\n\n). Lyman served as the first mayor of San Bernardino. In 1860, Young appointed three of the twelve apostles—Lyman, Charles C. Rich, and George Q. Cannon—to the presidency of the church's European Mission. On March 16, 1862, Lyman preached a sermon in Dundee, Scotland, which all but denied the reality of and the necessity for the atonement of Jesus Christ, which is a central tenet of the LDS Church. His speech appeared to have been overlooked for years, but on January 21", "id": "12068047" }, { "contents": "Mark E. Petersen\n\n\nMark Edward Petersen (November 7, 1900 – January 11, 1984) was an American news editor and religious leader who served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1944 until his death. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, he filled the vacancy in the Quorum caused by the excommunication of Richard R. Lyman. Petersen had become managing editor of the church-owned \"Deseret News\" in 1935 and editor in 1941.", "id": "2692480" }, { "contents": "Thomas C. Griggs\n\n\nthe LDS Church's Aaronic priesthood; his call to this office was given by Apostle George Q. Cannon. With the outbreak of the American Civil War, the Griggs heeded the counsel of LDS Church leaders to move to Utah Territory. The Griggs crossed the plains in Joseph Horne's Mormon pioneer company in 1861. Griggs first joined the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in 1866 when Charles John Thomas was the director. Griggs would continue as a member of the choir until his death in 1903. While Robert Sands was the conductor of the choir", "id": "9481149" }, { "contents": "Charles Clarence Neslen\n\n\nfrom Germany and he was imprisoned in Danzig. He served as president of the Königsberg District of the LDS Church for a part of his mission. Neslen was a member of the Democratic Party and a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1912. Neslen worked a total of 15 years for the \"Deseret News\". He was also a realtor and for a time served as secretary of the Salt Lake Real Estate Association. On October 26, 1905, Neslen married Grace T. Cannon, a daughter of George Q. Cannon.", "id": "21092533" }, { "contents": "Stephen L. Chipman\n\n\nStephen L. Chipman (1864–1945) was a member of the Utah State Legislature in 1903 and a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Utah County. He was also the first president of the Salt Lake Temple who was not also an apostle in the LDS Church. Chipman studied at Brigham Young Academy (the predecessor of Brigham Young University (BYU)) as a youth. From 1885 to 1887 he served as a Mormon missionary in the Southern States Mission of the LDS Church", "id": "15228384" }, { "contents": "Mountain Meadows massacre and Mormon public relations\n\n\nCannon, then president of the LDS California Mission. In the October 13, 1857 edition of Cannon's San Francisco newspaper \"The Western Standard\", Cannon responded to initial news reports of involvement by Mormons by charging the responsible journalists with writing \"reckless and malignant slanders\", despite knowing that the southern Utah Mormons were \"as innocent of [the massacre] as the child unborn\". The church's official newspaper in Salt Lake City, \"The Deseret News\", was initially slow to comment on the massacre,", "id": "22212632" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas the second-most senior apostle of the church after the death of Woodruff, Cannon did not become President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, as would be the practice in the LDS Church today. Rather, because Cannon was a member of the First Presidency, the church simply appointed the next senior apostle of the church—Brigham Young, Jr.—to be the quorum president. (Under today's practices, Cannon would have been appointed the president of the quorum and Young would have been appointed acting president.) Cannon", "id": "19825274" }, { "contents": "Clifford E. Young\n\n\nClifford Earle Young (December 7, 1883 – August 21, 1958) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1941 until his death. Young was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, the son of LDS Church leader Seymour B. Young. From 1905 to 1908, he served as a Mormon missionary in England and Germany. In 1928, Young became the president of the Alpine Stake of the LDS Church in Utah. In 1934, he joined the", "id": "8315768" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n33. Upon his joining the Quorum of the Twelve, Cannon was called to preside over the church's European Mission. Cannon's mission in Europe ended when he was recalled by Young in 1862 to work in Washington, D.C., to assist in the church's promotion of Utah Territory's bid for statehood. At the adjournment of the 1862 congressional session, Cannon again left for Europe to preside over the mission. In this capacity, Cannon was the editor of the \"Millennial Star\" and, for a short time,", "id": "19825271" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nfrom the federal authorities. In September 1888, Cannon surrendered himself and pleaded guilty at trial to charges of unlawful cohabitation under the Edmunds Act. As a result, Cannon served nearly six months in Utah's federal penitentiary. Cannon was pardoned in 1894 by U.S. President Grover Cleveland. Cannon died on April 12, 1901, in Monterey, California, at 74 years of age. Had he lived a few months longer, he would have become the President of the LDS Church: Lorenzo Snow died on October 10 of that year", "id": "19825280" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Isle of Man\n\n\nand Idaho which descends from the 19th century marriage of George Cannon and Ann Quayle before their emigration from Peel, Isle of Man. The family's most notable member was their oldest son George Quayle Cannon. The family is connected by marriage to the Bennion, Taylor, Wells and Young political families. LDS Membership statistics as of January 1, 2011 for the Isle of Man. The nation of the Isle of Man does not have its own mission. Instead it is served by an English mission. Five out of the six", "id": "7797107" }, { "contents": "The Contributor (LDS magazine)\n\n\nThe Contributor was an independent publication associated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) between 1879 and 1896. It was a monthly periodical and sought to represent the Young Men's and Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Associations (YMMIA and YLMIA respectively), the youth organizations of the LDS Church at the time. It was founded by Junius F. Wells, the inaugural head of the YMMIA. Abraham H. Cannon became editor when the magazine was purchased by the Cannon Publishing Company in 1892. With the", "id": "505110" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe official organ of the Sunday School until 1930, when it was replaced with \"The Instructor\". Cannon also served as the first general superintendent of the church's Sunday School from 1867 until his death. On April 8, 1873, Cannon became a member of the church's First Presidency when he was called as the first counselor by Brigham Young. Cannon went on to serve as counselor to three more presidents of the church: he was First Counselor to John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. Although Cannon", "id": "19825273" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\ntogether. Prior to her service in the general Primary presidency, Clara Cannon was a counselor in the presidencies of the Primary and Relief Society in the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. When Louie B. Felt became the first general presidency of the Primary, Matilda M. Barratt and Cannon were selected as Felt's counselors. Cannon was a counselor until 1895; the next year she was succeeded in the position by Josephine R. West. Clara Moses Cannon died of throat cancer in Centerville, Utah, aged 87 and was interred in", "id": "10663424" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nScouts of America and served in the organization's Great Salt Lake Council. Prior to his call as a general authority, Cannon served in the church as a bishop, stake president, patriarch, temple sealer, and regional representative. He was also the president of the church's Central British Mission from 1966 to 1969. From 1969 to 1972, Cannon was an assistant and counselor to W. Jay Eldredge, the general superintendent of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association. Cannon became a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy", "id": "8339580" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe Nauvoo Legion. During this time, Cannon served as printer of the \"Deseret News\" while it was publishing in exile in Fillmore, Utah. After the Utah War, he was called as president of the church's Eastern States Mission. The murder of Parley P. Pratt in 1857 created a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. That vacancy was not filled until Brigham Young called Cannon to the apostleship three years later. Cannon was ordained to the priesthood office of apostle on August 26, 1860, at age", "id": "19825270" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nin the Sandwich Islands (later known as the Kingdom of Hawaii), where he served for four years. While in the islands, Cannon converted many Native Hawaiians. One of the most notable was Jonatana Napela, who assisted Cannon in translating the Book of Mormon into Hawaiian. Joseph F. Smith, a future church president, would follow Cannon and serve in Hawaii one year later. Returning to Utah Territory, Cannon married Elizabeth Hoagland (daughter of Abraham Hoagland and his wife.) He was almost immediately called to assist apostle", "id": "19825268" }, { "contents": "Ronald E. Poelman\n\n\nRonald Eugene Poelman (May 10, 1928 – November 19, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 until his death. In 1984, he delivered a controversial sermon in the LDS Church's general conference which the church redacted before publishing. Poelman was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to a Latter-day Saint family. As a young man, he served as a Mormon missionary in the LDS Church's Netherlands Mission. He began his", "id": "4765396" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\n. He would marry Martha Brown of Ogden in 1878. In 1891 he helped to organize the Utah Republican Party. After a failed bid to become delegate from the Utah Territory, he succeeded and served from March 4, 1895, to January 4, 1896. Cannon was chosen in 1896 to serve as senator by the Utah Legislature in spite of LDS church leadership favoring his father for the job. He served in the United States Senate, initially, as a member of the Republican Party; however, he later became a", "id": "11000346" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nmember of the Silver Republican Party, founded by his successor (and future employer at \"The Salt Lake Tribune\") Thomas Kearns. Cannon lost re-election in 1899. Utah's state legislators indicated they would not support Cannon for re-election shortly after the November 1898 elections. Cannon had voted against the Dingley Act, which would have raised tariffs on sugar and helped the Utah sugar industry. It was strongly supported by the LDS Church hierarchy, who now opposed his re-election. Other factors were his support", "id": "11000347" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand Ghana. The first convert baptized in Africa was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and his wife were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' centre in Nauvoo, Illinois. For three months in 1989, Cannon was the interim president of the LDS Church's Germany Hamburg Mission; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. After his interim service as mission president, Cannon was the second president of the Frankfurt Germany Temple from 1989 to", "id": "9582827" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nCounselor to William B. Preston, the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church; he served in this position between 1884 and 1886. In 1884, shortly after Cannon had become a general authority, a sensationalized news story by Joseph Lippman in the \"Salt Lake Tribune\" alleged that Cannon had taken his wife's sister Louie Wells as a plural wife. Lippman suggested that Cannon and Wells had been married in the Logan Temple. In fact, there had been no such marriage, though it was later revealed that Cannon and Wells had", "id": "7202724" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nbranches of the LDS Church in Nigeria and Ghana. The first convert baptized in Nigeria was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and her husband were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' center in Nauvoo, Illinois. In 1989, they served as interim leaders of the Germany Hamburg Mission of the church; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. From 1989 to 1992, Cannon was the matron of the Frankfurt Germany Temple while her husband", "id": "9582966" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\n's Quorum of the Twelve. Abraham was a son of George Q. Cannon, an early member of the church's First Presidency. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary in the church's Central States Mission. After his mission, he served in the United States Air Force during the Second World War. In 1946, he began attending Brigham Young University (BYU). After graduating from BYU, Cannon became a vice president of Beneficial Life Insurance Company in Salt Lake City. He was active in the Boy", "id": "8339579" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\n1925, Cannon became the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church, succeeding Charles W. Nibley. Cannon's counselors were David A. Smith and John Wells. In 1938, Cannon was released as Presiding Bishop and was succeeded by LeGrand Richards. At the same time, Cannon was ordained an apostle and made an \"associate\" of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, a unique position that had never been filled before. When Quorum member Melvin J. Ballard died the next year, Cannon became a full member of the Quorum; he served", "id": "2194374" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\nClarissa Cordelia (\"Clara\") Moses Cannon (April 21, 1839 – August 21, 1926) was a Mormon pioneer and a member of the first-ever general presidency of the Primary organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). She was the second counselor to general president Louie B. Felt from 1880 to 1895. Clara Moses was born in Westfield, Massachusetts. In 1846 she took the six-month journey on the ship \"Brooklyn\" from New York City to San", "id": "10663422" }, { "contents": "Leonora Cannon Taylor\n\n\nLeonora Cannon Taylor (October 6, 1796–December 9, 1868) was a member of the Relief Society organization at the time of its origin and the first wife of John Taylor, the third president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). On October 6, 1796 in Peel, Isle of Man, Leonora Cannon was born to George Cannon and Leonora Callister. As the oldest daughter in the family, when Leonora's father died when she was thirteen she went away to London to work", "id": "16190675" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\ntheir books, which were then distributed by others. However, Cannon & Sons distributed several important books through their stores and mail order (see table). The company had extensive ties to the LDS Church-owned newspaper, the \"Deseret News.\" Five of Cannon's sons held important positions in the paper, and Cannon himself was editor between 1867 and 1872, and again while temporarily owning the paper from 1892 to 1898. Nearly every George Q. Cannon & Sons book was printed on the \"Deseret News\" press", "id": "18344086" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nof the Utah Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Cannon was the oldest son of George Q. Cannon and the one most expected to follow in his prominent father's footsteps in politics, church office, and journalism. Heber J. Grant once said of Cannon: \"There probably is not a young man in the church who had had more opportunities and advantages extended to him educationally, spiritually, and every other way than John Q. Cannon.\" At the age of 27, Cannon was called to serve as the Second", "id": "7202723" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nMartha Maria \"Mattie\" Hughes Cannon (July 1, 1857 – July 10, 1932) was a Welsh-born immigrant to the United States, a polygamous wife, physician, Utah women's rights advocate and suffragist, and Utah State Senator. Her family immigrated to the United States as converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and traveled West to settle in Utah territory with other Mormons. She started working at the age of fourteen. At sixteen she enrolled in the University", "id": "15993465" }, { "contents": "Church Office Building\n\n\nThe Church Office Building is a 28-story building in Salt Lake City, Utah, which houses the administrative support staff for the lay ministry of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) throughout the world. The building is 420 ft (128 m) tall at roof level and is located within the Temple Square complex on the corner of North Temple and State Street. The building was designed by George Cannon Young at a cost of US$31 million to build. Construction took place from 1962 to 1972", "id": "13754819" }, { "contents": "John Lyman Smith\n\n\nJohn Lyman Smith (November 17, 1828 – February 21, 1898) was an American politician and Mormon missionary. He served as a member of the Utah Territory's Legislative Assembly's House of Representatives for Iron County, Utah, from 1852 to 1853, and the Great Salt Lake County, Utah, from 1853 to 1855. Cousin of the founder of the Latter Day Saint Movement, Joseph Smith, Smith was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) who traveled to the", "id": "18219861" }, { "contents": "Francis M. Lyman\n\n\nFrancis Marion Lyman (January 12, 1840 – November 18, 1916) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was the President of the Quorum from 1903 until his death. Lyman's father and son were also apostles in the church: his father was Amasa M. Lyman and his son was Richard R. Lyman. Both his father and son were excommunicated from the church while serving as apostles. Francis M. Lyman was born as", "id": "20761093" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nAngus Munn Cannon (May 17, 1834 – June 7, 1915) was an early Latter Day Saint leader and Mormon pioneer. Cannon was born in Liverpool, Lancashire, England. His Manx parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 1840, being baptized by his uncle John Taylor. In 1842, the Cannon family went to Nauvoo, Illinois, United States. By 1849, they were in Utah Territory. Cannon was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon and their lives followed very similar paths up", "id": "7202650" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\naffairs while Taylor recovered. This training would serve him well in later life. Cannon's father died in 1845. In 1846, Taylor traveled to England to organize the affairs of the church after Smith's death. Meanwhile, Cannon accompanied Taylor's wife and family as they moved to Winter Quarters, Nebraska. When Taylor returned, Cannon traveled with the entire Taylor family to the Salt Lake Valley, arriving in October 1847. In 1849, Cannon was asked by church president Brigham Young to serve as a missionary for the church", "id": "19825267" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nstaying in the position until December 31, 1903. Cannon attempted to prohibit children not vaccinated from attending school in case of a disease outbreak. The Board of Health sent out vaccines; however, the \"Deseret News\" spread information that vaccines weren't safe. LDS Church leaders were divided on the subject. One apostle, Brigham Young Jr. was very vocal in his opinions, writing in the \"Deseret News\" about the evils of vaccinations. The influence of the \"Deseret News\" and Mormon religious leaders limited how many", "id": "15993490" }, { "contents": "Billy Johnson (Mormon)\n\n\nLDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball announced Official Declaration 2 which extended the priesthood to all worthy male members of the church regardless of race or color. In gratitude, Johnson sent a letter to Kimball, explaining that God had prepared the people in Ghana, asking him to send missionaries to the members. Kimball responded to his pleas and sent the first called missionaries Rendell N. Mabey and Rachel Mabey. They joined Edwin Q. Cannon and Janath R. Cannon. Johnson was finally baptized into the LDS Church on December 9, 1978. He", "id": "4108521" }, { "contents": "Juvenile Instructor\n\n\ncatechisms on the Bible, Book of Mormon, and Doctrine and Covenants; musical compositions; illustrations; stories; editorial teachings; and other aids to gospel instruction. It was the first magazine for children published in the United States west of the Mississippi River. For much of its history, \"The Juvenile Instructor\" was owned by the Cannon family. Its first editor was George Q. Cannon, an apostle in the LDS Church. Cannon and his family continued to publish the magazine privately until January 1, 1901, when the", "id": "9210614" }, { "contents": "Joseph F. Smith\n\n\nand as second counselor to Lorenzo Snow (1898–1901). Smith was appointed first counselor to Snow on the death of first counselor George Q. Cannon, but, as Snow himself died only four days later, Smith never served in that position. He succeeded Snow as president of the LDS Church and president of the Salt Lake Temple. He served as president of the temple until 1911, when he transferred the responsibility to Anthon H. Lund. Smith also served as editor of the \"Improvement Era\" and \"Juvenile Instructor\",", "id": "4117444" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in California\n\n\nQ. Cannon began publication in San Francisco of the \"Western Standard\", a weekly periodical supportive of the Church. The first colonization from Utah to California came in 1851 when a company of about 450 saints and slaves under direction of Elders Amasa M. Lyman and Charles C. Rich of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles settled at what is now San Bernardino. The colony was the final settlement in a string of Mormon communities extending from Salt Lake City in an area known as Deseret. The community thrived, and on July 6,", "id": "22187256" }, { "contents": "Sunday School (LDS Church)\n\n\nout. On November 11, 1867, Young and church leaders Daniel H. Wells, George A. Smith, Wilford Woodruff, George Q. Cannon, and Brigham Young, Jr. met and organized the Parent Sunday School Union. Young appointed Cannon as the first general superintendent of the Sunday School, a position he would hold until his death in 1901. In 1872, the Sunday School organization was renamed the Deseret Sunday School Union. The organized Sunday School addressed lesson topics and source materials, grading, prizes and rewards, use of hymns", "id": "8671425" }, { "contents": "Hugh W. Pinnock\n\n\nHugh Wallace Pinnock (January 15, 1934 – December 16, 2000) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Pinnock was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Western States Mission. Pinnock graduated from University of Utah in 1958, where he became a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity and Owl and Key. Prior to his call to the First", "id": "8519001" }, { "contents": "Charles W. Penrose\n\n\nwas organized Penrose was called as a member of the high council. In 1877, Penrose became the assistant editor of the LDS Church-owned \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, working under George Q. Cannon. Penrose was known for his writing, including missionary tracts and lyrics of Latter-day Saint hymns, including \"God of Our Fathers\", \"O Ye Mountains High\", and \"Up, Awake, Ye Defenders of Zion\". In 1880, Penrose became the editor-in-chief of", "id": "2194239" }, { "contents": "Rulon S. Wells\n\n\nRulon Seymour Wells (July 7, 1854 – May 7, 1941) was a Utah politician and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1893 until his death. Wells was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to LDS Church leader Daniel H. Wells (1814–1891) and Louisa Free (1824–1886). In 1875, Wells travelled to Europe as a Mormon missionary and worked primarily in Germany and Switzerland. He returned to the United States in 1877. On", "id": "8315459" }, { "contents": "G. Homer Durham\n\n\nGeorge Homer Durham (February 4, 1911 – January 10, 1985) was an American academic administrator and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Durham was born in Parowan, Utah, and was raised in Salt Lake City. As a boy in grade school, he met and became lifelong friends with future LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley. As a young man, Durham served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the British", "id": "21588256" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nJonatana Napela or Jonathan Hawaii Napela (first name also spelled Iohatana, full name Napelakapuonamahanaonaleleonalani) (September 11, 1813 – August 6, 1879) was one of the earliest Hawaiian converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Hawaii, joining in the 1830s. He helped translate the Book of Mormon into the Hawaiian language, as \"Ka Buke a Moramona,\" working with missionary George Q. Cannon. Napela was appointed to serve as a superintendent of the colony at Kalaupapa, Molokai", "id": "16647246" }, { "contents": "Richfield, Utah\n\n\nserves about 600 students per year. As in most settled areas of rural Utah, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) plays a prominent role. The Mormons were highly industrious colonizers. From 1847, when they founded Salt Lake City, until 1877, they founded 360 towns. Following direction from Brigham Young, Latter-day Saints founded the town and outlying hamlets about 150 years ago. Members of the LDS Church are predominant among the residents. Even in this heart of Mormon country,", "id": "11082836" }, { "contents": "Marvin O. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Owen Ashton (April 8, 1883 – October 7, 1946) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1938 until his death. Prior to becoming a general authority, Ashton was a prominent local leader of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City, Utah. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Mormon parents. He married Rachel Grace Jeremy in 1906 and in 1907 went to England as a missionary for the LDS Church. He returned", "id": "14505232" }, { "contents": "LeGrand Richards\n\n\nLeGrand Richards (February 6, 1886 – January 11, 1983) was a prominent missionary and leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He served as the seventh presiding bishop of the LDS Church from 1938 to 1952, and was then called as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles by church president David O. McKay. Richards served in the Quorum of the Twelve until his death in Salt Lake City, Utah, at the age of 96. Richards was born in", "id": "2294374" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nwas educated at Lahainaluna School. Napela was trained as a lawyer. He was serving as a judge in Wailuku, Hawaii, when he met American George Q. Cannon, a member of the LDS Church on a missionary trip to Hawaii. After Napela's conversion in the 1830s to the LDS Church, the government forced the judge to resign from his position. The LDS Church was regarded with suspicion. LDS Church historian Andrew Jensen said that Napela \"did splendid missionary work for the Church.\" Napela was sent on a specific", "id": "16647248" }, { "contents": "Gardo House\n\n\ncounselor George Q. Cannon and other church leaders suggested that Taylor occupy the Gardo House after its completion, but he repeatedly refused. However, when church members unanimously voted on April 9, 1879, to make the Gardo House the official parsonage for LDS Church presidents, Taylor reluctantly accepted their decision. Moses Thatcher, William Jennings, and Angus M. Cannon were appointed as a committee to oversee completion of the mansion. On December 27, 1881, the Deseret News published a letter from John Taylor announcing a public reception and tour of", "id": "1496184" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nStates Mission of the church in 1901. In 1902, Grant married George J. Cannon. In 1923, Cannon was asked to succeed Mae Taylor Nystrom as the second counselor to Martha Horne Tingey, the general president of what was then called the Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Association. In 1929, when Ruth May Fox succeeded Tingey, Cannon was asked to be her first counselor. Cannon served in this capacity until 1929, when Fox was released and Cannon was selected by her father, who was President of the Church, to", "id": "1681854" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\n. (At the time, Cannon was a counselor to James E. Faust in the church's International Mission, which had jurisdiction over all areas of the world not otherwise part of a mission.) After Bateman and Cannon reported the results of their trip, Cannon and his wife were called and set apart as the first Mormon missionaries to black Africa. They—along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey—preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 35 branches and 5 districts of the LDS Church in Nigeria", "id": "9582826" }, { "contents": "Marion D. Hanks\n\n\nMarion Duff Hanks (October 13, 1921 – August 5, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1953 until his death. Hanks was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man he served in the Northern States Mission of the LDS Church, which was headquartered in Chicago. He was in the United States Navy during World War II and received a J.D. from the University of Utah. Prior to his call as a general authority", "id": "6558935" }, { "contents": "Lillie T. Freeze\n\n\nthe Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association (YLMIA). In this capacity, she was invited to speak at the Salt Lake Tabernacle on April 6, 1880, at a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the LDS Church's founding. In 1880, Lillie Freeze was one of the founding members of the LDS Church's Primary Association. Freeze was appointed as the first secretary of the general presidency, which was composed of Louie B. Felt, Matilda M. Barratt, and Clara C. M. Cannon. Freeze was secretary until 1888, when", "id": "10906695" }, { "contents": "Henry D. Taylor\n\n\nHenry Dixon Taylor (November 22, 1903 – February 24, 1987) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1958 until his death. Taylor was born in Provo, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Eastern States Mission. During his mission, Taylor was the president of the church's Connecticut District. Taylor received a bachelor's degree from Brigham Young University (BYU) and a master's degree", "id": "2477100" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas elected to be the non-voting delegate for Utah Territory in the United States Congress in 1872. He remained a congressional delegate until 1882, when his seat was declared vacant by the enactment of the Edmunds Act, which terminated many political and civil rights for Utah's Mormon polygamists. By 1880, Cannon had served four terms in Congress as Territorial Delegate. The newly appointed anti-Mormon territorial governor, Eli Houston Murray, openly supported the Liberal Party, which generally opposed church candidates. The 1880 territory-wide election", "id": "19825275" }, { "contents": "George F. Richards\n\n\nGeorge Franklin Richards (February 23, 1861 – August 8, 1950) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from April 9, 1906 until his death. He also served as Acting Presiding Patriarch of the LDS Church from 1937 to 1942 and President of the Quorum of the Twelve from May 25, 1945 until his death. Richards was born in Farmington, Utah Territory, the son of Franklin D. Richards and Nanny Longstroth. Richards", "id": "2194252" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\n1882, at the age of 23, Cannon assumed business control of the \"Juvenile Instructor\" and associated publications. He continued his management until his death. In October 1892, Cannon and his brother John Q. Cannon took control of the \"Deseret News\" publishing. He also became the editor and publisher of \"The Contributor\". On October 9, 1882, Cannon became a member of the First Seven Presidents of the Seventy of the church. On October 7, 1889, church president Wilford Woodruff named Cannon a member", "id": "9035316" }, { "contents": "Howard Cannon\n\n\nHis grandfather David Cannon, was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon, and a leading figure in the building of the St. George Temple, who was later the third president of that temple. His father Walter Cannon was one of David Cannon's 31 children. Howard's parents had married in 1909, his mother was Leah Sullivan. When Cannon was two years old his father left for England to served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for two years. Cannon went to Woodward School in", "id": "18060013" }, { "contents": "Mormon fiction\n\n\nMormons were generally non-fiction, including scripture, missionary tracts, and doctrinal literature. In 1844, Parley P. Pratt published what is commonly cited as the first work of LDS fiction, the didactic \"Dialogue between Joseph Smith and the Devil\". It was first published in the New York Herald. Early Mormon leaders like Brigham Young and George Q. Cannon condemned novels for wasting time, a rhetoric that persisted until the 1880s. Fiction among LDS Church members developed once the Mormons had settled in Utah and developed a degree of", "id": "453087" }, { "contents": "Marvin J. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Jeremy Ashton (May 6, 1915 – February 25, 1994) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1971 until his death. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was the son of Marvin O. Ashton, a local LDS leader, who later became a church general authority. The younger Ashton worked in the lumber business as a youth. He graduated from the University of Utah. He served a", "id": "19825413" }, { "contents": "Rudger Clawson\n\n\nRudger Judd Clawson (March 12, 1857 – June 21, 1943) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1898 until his death in 1943. He also served as President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1921 until his death and as a member of the First Presidency of the LDS Church for five days in 1901. Clawson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to Hiram Bradley Clawson and Margaret Judd", "id": "9035430" }, { "contents": "Utah-Idaho Sugar Company\n\n\npayment and a $130,000 loan. Cutler also went to Chicago and New York City to secure loans from banks; he came back, via train, with a bag full of money, as he did not think any banks in Utah could have cashed the large bank draft. The LDS church made more payments and secured more loans. In addition, George Q. Cannon and Heber J. Grant personally funded the enterprise. Joseph F. Smith, president of the LDS Church, gave a sermon in 1893 explaining that this was done to", "id": "1319991" }, { "contents": "President of the Church (LDS Church)\n\n\nthe President of the Quorum. When Woodruff died, his counselors returned to the Quorum based on the date they were ordained an apostle, placing George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith below Brigham Young Jr. and John Willard Young. Heber J. Grant objected to that arguing that seniority should be based on ordination to the Quorum rather than ordination as an apostle. Young argued that an apostle should not be demoted as long as he is worthy of the position. On March 31, 1900, Snow met with his counselors, Cannon and", "id": "16343191" }, { "contents": "Alfred W. McCune\n\n\n. Judge Orlando Powers, Associate Justice of the Utah Supreme Court, said in 1906 that he understood that McCune was not a Mormon. Frank J. Cannon, too, claimed McCune was not a Mormon, and B. H. Roberts, LDS Church historian and member of the First Council of the Seventy, said in 1930 that McCune was not a church member. Historian Orvin Malmquist, however, says that church records show he was baptized into the LDS Church at the age of eight in 1857, and that his marriage to Elizabeth", "id": "15062757" } ]
Joseph Jenne Cannon ( May 22 , 1877 -- November 5 , 1945 ) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ( LDS Church ) . He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family . As a young man , Cannon served as a for the LDS Church in Europe . He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903 . Lyman and Cannon also similarly dedicated Finland in 1903 . In the 1908 election , Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from . He served one term , from 1909 to 1911 . Cannon was not formally associated with any political party . From 1931 to 1934 , Cannon was the editor of the Deseret News , a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church . His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church 's British Mission . Cannon served in this capacity for three years , until 1937 . Immediately following his return to Utah , Cannon was asked to become the first assistant to George Q. Morris , the general superintendent of the church 's . Cannon served in this capacity until his death from [START_ENT] pancreatic cancer [END_ENT]
5ba19c0c-4b37-4c1b-89e8-362872801ab7_Joseph_J._Canno:16
[{"answer": "Pancreatic cancer", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "363559", "title": "Pancreatic cancer"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nJoseph Jenne Cannon (May 22, 1877 – November 5, 1945) was a Utah politician and newspaper editor and was a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was a member of the prominent Cannon political family. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary for the LDS Church in Europe. He accompanied LDS Church apostle Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in St. Petersburg and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the preaching of Mormonism in August 1903. Lyman and Cannon", "id": "13710370" }, { "contents": "Joseph J. Cannon\n\n\nalso similarly dedicated Finland in 1903. In the 1908 election, Cannon was elected as a member of the Utah House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. He served one term, from 1909 to 1911. Cannon was not formally associated with any political party. From 1931 to 1934, Cannon was the editor of the \"Deseret News\", a Salt Lake City newspaper owned by the LDS Church. His tenure ended when the LDS Church asked him to become the president of the church's British Mission. Cannon served in this", "id": "13710371" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nSylvester Quayle Cannon (June 10, 1877 – May 29, 1943) was an American businessman, engineer, and religious leader who served as the sixth presiding bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1925 to 1938 and a member of church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1939 until his death. He was the son of George Q. Cannon, an apostle and member of the church's First Presidency. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. He studied", "id": "2194372" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nJohn Quayle Cannon (April 19, 1857 – January 14, 1931) was an editor-in-chief of the \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, Utah, and a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He also served as a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army during the Spanish–American War. He was the son of LDS Church apostle George Q. Cannon and Elizabeth Hoagland. He was married to Elizabeth \"Annie\" Wells Cannon. Cannon", "id": "7202721" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nFrank Jenne Cannon (January 25, 1859July 25, 1933) was the first United States Senator from Utah, who served from 1896 to 1899. Born in Salt Lake City, he was the eldest child of Sarah Jenne Cannon and George Q. Cannon. His father was an Apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and later was a member of its First Presidency. After attending the school in Salt Lake City, he studied at University of Deseret, graduating at the age of 19", "id": "11000345" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nEdwin Quayle \"Ted\" Cannon, Jr. (May 6, 1918 – April 6, 2005) was a Utah politician and businessman and was a prominent leader and missionary in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was among the first missionaries in the LDS Church to preach to black people in Africa and was part of the first group missionaries sent to establish official congregations of the LDS Church in West Africa. Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to Edwin Q. Cannon,", "id": "9582822" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Ivins Cannon (March 9, 1920 – August 4, 2009) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1986 to 1991. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, Cannon was the son of George J. Cannon and Lucy Grant Cannon, a leader of the youth in the LDS Church. His maternal grandfather was Heber J. Grant, the seventh president of the LDS Church. His paternal grandfather was Abraham H. Cannon, who was a member of the church", "id": "8339578" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nLucy Grant Cannon (October 22, 1880 – May 7, 1966) was the fourth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1937 to 1948. She was a member of the general presidency of the Young Women from 1923 to 1948, serving as a counselor to two presidents. Lucy Grant was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Lucy Stringham and LDS Church apostle Heber J. Grant. She served as a church missionary in the Western", "id": "1681853" }, { "contents": "George Mousley Cannon\n\n\nTrust Company. He served as a delegate to the 1895 Utah State Constitutional Convention and chaired the committee which formulated the articles on taxation and public debt. In 1896, Cannon was elected to the Utah State Senate and served as its first president. When The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) modified stake boundaries in 1900, dividing the new Granite Stake off from the Salt Lake Stake, Cannon became the Sunday School Superintendent of the new stake. From 1901 until after 1930, Cannon served as", "id": "8629874" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\nat the University of Utah and then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he received a B.S. degree in mining engineering. In 1899, Cannon began an LDS Church mission in Belgium. Cannon then served from 1900 to 1902 as president of the church's Netherlands–Belgium Mission. Cannon also served as Francis M. Lyman's secretary on a three-month trip to many nations along the Mediterranean and in the Middle East. From 1916 to 1925, Cannon served as president of the Pioneer Stake in Salt Lake City. In", "id": "2194373" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\nAbraham Hoagland Cannon (also reported as Abram H. Cannon) (March 12, 1859 – July 19, 1896) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. His parents were George Q. Cannon, a Latter Day Saints apostle, and Elizabeth Hoagland, daughter of Abraham Hoagland. Cannon studied at Deseret University. Later, he studied architecture under Obed Taylor. Cannon married Sarah A.", "id": "9035314" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nSr. and Luella Wareing. He was born at his parents' home because of the 1918 influenza pandemic. Cannon's paternal grandfather was George Q. Cannon, a Mormon pioneer and prominent leader in the LDS Church. Cannon was raised in Salt Lake City. In 1937, Cannon went on a mission for the LDS Church to Nazi Germany. He was president of a branch of the church in Berlin in 1939 when the LDS Church evacuated its missionaries from Europe at the beginning of World War II. Cannon finished his mission in", "id": "9582823" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\n. Callville was submerged when Lake Mead was filled. In 1869 and 1870, Cannon served a second mission in the Eastern United States. In April 1876, Cannon became president of the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. He served in this position until April 1, 1904. After his time as stake president, Cannon served as a patriarch in the church. Cannon was the mayor of St. George, Utah Territory in 1861 and 1862. In 1896, after Utah had become a U.S. state, he stood for election", "id": "7202652" }, { "contents": "Donald Q. Cannon\n\n\nDonald Quayle Cannon (born 1936) is a retired professor at Brigham Young University who specializes in Mormon history, particularly early Mormon history and international Mormon history. As a young man, Cannon was a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Germany. Cannon earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Utah. Cannon holds a Ph.D. from Clark University. In the late 1960s, he taught at the University of Southern Maine. In the LDS Church he has", "id": "10057919" }, { "contents": "George Goddard (Mormon)\n\n\nwas the clerk to LDS Church presiding bishop Edward Hunter. From 1874 to 1884, Goddard was the clerk of the LDS Church's biannual general conferences. In 1872, Goddard became the inaugural first assistant to George Q. Cannon, the first superintendent of the Deseret Sunday School Union. Goddard served in this capacity for 26 years, until his death in 1899. Goddard was also a member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and a patriarch in the church. He died in Salt Lake City and was buried at Salt Lake City Cemetery.", "id": "7701639" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nuntil their arrival in Utah. In 1854, Cannon went on a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to the Eastern United States, where he assisted John Taylor in publishing a periodical entitled \"The Mormon\". He also preached and baptized in Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware. Cannon returned to Utah Territory due to the troubles connected with the Utah War. In 1864, Cannon helped establish Call's Landing on the Colorado River, later known as Callville, Nevada", "id": "7202651" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nJanath Russell Cannon (October 28, 1918 – July 5, 2007) was a counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Cannon was also a prominent missionary in the church and was among the first to preach to black people in Africa. Born in Ogden, Utah, Janath Russell was educated at Wellesley College. In 1941, she married Edwin Q. Cannon in the Salt Lake Temple. From 1971 to 1974,", "id": "9582964" }, { "contents": "Joseph A. Cannon\n\n\nserved as an assistant administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from 1983 to 1985. Joseph A. Cannon was born on July 31, 1949. Cannon served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Ireland, including on the Isle of Man, the ancestral homeland of the Cannons. Cannon received a degree in political science and, in 1977, a law degree from Brigham Young University. Cannon served as a law clerk in Salt Lake City for U.S. District", "id": "7202830" }, { "contents": "Elaine A. Cannon\n\n\nElaine Anderson Cannon (April 9, 1922 – May 19, 2003) was the eighth general president of the Young Women organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 to 1984. Cannon has been a writer and an editor and is the author of over 50 books. Elaine Anderson was born to Aldon Joseph and Minnie Egan Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a teenager, she started writing a daily column aimed at teenagers for the \"Deseret News\". She", "id": "1682052" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nAdele Morris Cannon Howells (January 11, 1886 – April 14, 1951) was the fourth general president of the Primary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1943 until her death of rheumatic heart disease. She contributed to \"The Children's Friend\" magazine, as well as the fundraising for the Children's Primary Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. Adele Morris Cannon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to George Mousley Cannon and Marian Adelaide Morris. She", "id": "1336419" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\nGeorgius Young Cannon (March 6, 1892 – March 29, 1987) was a 20th-century architect in the American West who operated principally out of Salt Lake City, Utah. Cannon trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), graduating in 1918. He then joined the army and later returned to Utah to intern with the architectural firm Ware & Treganza and Cannon & Fetzer. He served two missions to Germany for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). For a time", "id": "12786285" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nGeorge Quayle Cannon (January 11, 1827 – April 12, 1901) was an early member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), and served in the First Presidency under four successive presidents of the church: Brigham Young, John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. He was the church's chief political strategist, and was dubbed \"the Mormon premier\" and \"the Mormon Richelieu\" by the press. He was also a five", "id": "19825263" }, { "contents": "Adele C. Howells\n\n\nwas the oldest of nine children, and her father George Cannon was the first president of the Utah State Senate. As a child, Cannon suffered from rheumatic fever. She enjoyed reading in her spare time and horseback riding. She was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Cannon attended schools in Salt Lake City and graduated from the LDS High School and Business College in 1903. She attended the University of Utah and studied physical education and graduated with her bachelor's degree in 1909. Cannon", "id": "1336420" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nis one of the few general authorities of the LDS Church to have been excommunicated. From 1889 until 1892, Cannon was the editor of the \"Ogden Standard\". From October 1892 until April 1898, he was the editor in chief of the \"Deseret News\". After the Spanish–American War he returned to work at the \"Deseret News\" and served as an executive editor of the newspaper off-and-on until his death. He was much beloved by his co-workers. Cannon was a member", "id": "7202722" }, { "contents": "Tracy Y. Cannon\n\n\nLatter-day Saints. In 1939, he was made second assistant to Melvin J. Ballard, supervisor of the committee. From 1915 to 1927, Cannon was a member of the high council of the Pioneer Stake of the LDS Church. In 1917, he became a member of the Deseret Sunday School Union General Board. From 1930 through 1936, Cannon was bishop of the Cannon Ward in Salt Lake City. Cannon was an editor of the 1927 LDS Church hymnal. In 1925, Cannon was appointed director of the McCune School", "id": "12019030" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe church's Welsh-language periodical, \"Udgorn Seion\". From 1867 to 1874, Cannon was the managing editor of the \"Deseret News\". It was under his direction that the newspaper was first published on a daily basis. In 1866, Cannon began publication of a magazine for youth and young adult Latter-day Saints called \"The Juvenile Instructor\". He owned and published this magazine until his death; in 1901 his family sold the magazine to the LDS Church's Sunday School organization. The periodical was", "id": "19825272" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nCannon and her husband were heads of the Switzerland Mission of the LDS Church. Upon their return to Utah in 1974, Cannon became the first counselor to Barbara B. Smith in the general presidency of the church's Relief Society. Cannon served in this capacity until 1978, when she was released so that she and her husband could become the first missionaries of the church to preach in \"black Africa\". They — along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey — preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 27", "id": "9582965" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\nan LDS Church organization responsible for educating young members of the LDS church, and the magazine was the first church periodical oriented toward youth. Cannon opened the George Q. Cannon & Sons bookstore in 1867 to sell the magazine and other publications of an uplifting nature. Cannon believed that secular novels did not reflect Latter-day Saint values. In the 1880s, Cannon expanded with a branch in Ogden, Utah. It is not known how many books Cannon & Sons actually published itself. In this era, authors commonly self-published", "id": "18344085" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n. Cannon was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. Cannon fathered 32 children, some of whom are Abraham H. Cannon, John Q. Cannon, and Sylvester Q. Cannon, who all became general authorities of the LDS Church; Frank J. Cannon, Utah's first U.S. Senator; and Lewis T. Cannon and Georgius Y. Cannon, prominent architects in Utah. Some of Cannon's prominent descendants include Howard Cannon, U.S. Senator from Nevada from 1959 to 1983 and Chris Cannon, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1997 to", "id": "19825281" }, { "contents": "Salt Lake City Council Hall\n\n\nwho was then the official architect for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Built at First South and 120 East (more on Salt Lake City's coordinate system), sandstone for the structure was delivered from Red Butte Canyon on Utah's first chartered railroad. The well-furnished Greek revival building was completed at a cost of $70,000. In January 1866, City Hall was dedicated by George Q. Cannon, a prominent LDS leader. Many other LDS leaders attended the dedication including Brigham", "id": "19382830" }, { "contents": "Georgius Y. Cannon\n\n\n, Cannon moved to Los Angeles and worked as the office manager of his MIT schoolmate Wallace Neff. He later returned to Utah and designed numerous buildings, mostly residences, and some of which remain on the National Register of Historic Places. Among his works were meetinghouses of the LDS Church and other civic buildings. Cannon served on a church-appointed board of six architects that oversaw the construction of the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple. Cannon was the youngest of 32 children born to LDS Church leader George Q. Cannon. His mother,", "id": "12786286" }, { "contents": "Karl G. Maeser\n\n\nin the General Superintendency of the Deseret Sunday School Union. He was the Second Assistant to General Superintendent George Q. Cannon from July 1894 to January 1899. He then served as the First Assistant to Cannon from January 1899 until February 1901. Maeser also participated in the Utah constitutional convention after Abraham Smoot's death in 1895. He proposed an article to support prohibition, but later backed down. Missionaries from the LDS Church were removed from California in 1858 due to the Utah War. Missionary work resumed in 1892. Maeser presided over", "id": "11030473" }, { "contents": "Frank B. Woodbury\n\n\nFrank Bartlett Woodbury (December 27, 1867 – December 21, 1962) was a leader of and an Acting Presiding Patriarch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), one of only three church members to hold this position in church history. Born in St. George, Utah Territory, to Orin Nelson Woodbury and Ann Cannon, Woodbury served in many capacities in the church on a local level. Some, but not all, LDS Church sources list Woodbury as \"Acting Presiding Patriarch\" of", "id": "8238754" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand 1958 and served three full terms. From 1964 to 1971, Cannon was a bishop of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City. From 1971 to 1974, he was the president of the Switzerland Mission of the church. In 1978, three weeks after the LDS Church announced that it would no longer impose restrictions of black people receiving the priesthood or participating in temple ordinances, Cannon traveled to Africa on behalf of the church with Merrill J. Bateman to assess the prospects for church missionary work and growth in \"black Africa\"", "id": "9582825" }, { "contents": "Amasa Lyman\n\n\n). Lyman served as the first mayor of San Bernardino. In 1860, Young appointed three of the twelve apostles—Lyman, Charles C. Rich, and George Q. Cannon—to the presidency of the church's European Mission. On March 16, 1862, Lyman preached a sermon in Dundee, Scotland, which all but denied the reality of and the necessity for the atonement of Jesus Christ, which is a central tenet of the LDS Church. His speech appeared to have been overlooked for years, but on January 21", "id": "12068047" }, { "contents": "Mark E. Petersen\n\n\nMark Edward Petersen (November 7, 1900 – January 11, 1984) was an American news editor and religious leader who served as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1944 until his death. Born in Salt Lake City, Utah, he filled the vacancy in the Quorum caused by the excommunication of Richard R. Lyman. Petersen had become managing editor of the church-owned \"Deseret News\" in 1935 and editor in 1941.", "id": "2692480" }, { "contents": "Thomas C. Griggs\n\n\nthe LDS Church's Aaronic priesthood; his call to this office was given by Apostle George Q. Cannon. With the outbreak of the American Civil War, the Griggs heeded the counsel of LDS Church leaders to move to Utah Territory. The Griggs crossed the plains in Joseph Horne's Mormon pioneer company in 1861. Griggs first joined the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in 1866 when Charles John Thomas was the director. Griggs would continue as a member of the choir until his death in 1903. While Robert Sands was the conductor of the choir", "id": "9481149" }, { "contents": "Charles Clarence Neslen\n\n\nfrom Germany and he was imprisoned in Danzig. He served as president of the Königsberg District of the LDS Church for a part of his mission. Neslen was a member of the Democratic Party and a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1912. Neslen worked a total of 15 years for the \"Deseret News\". He was also a realtor and for a time served as secretary of the Salt Lake Real Estate Association. On October 26, 1905, Neslen married Grace T. Cannon, a daughter of George Q. Cannon.", "id": "21092533" }, { "contents": "Stephen L. Chipman\n\n\nStephen L. Chipman (1864–1945) was a member of the Utah State Legislature in 1903 and a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Utah County. He was also the first president of the Salt Lake Temple who was not also an apostle in the LDS Church. Chipman studied at Brigham Young Academy (the predecessor of Brigham Young University (BYU)) as a youth. From 1885 to 1887 he served as a Mormon missionary in the Southern States Mission of the LDS Church", "id": "15228384" }, { "contents": "Mountain Meadows massacre and Mormon public relations\n\n\nCannon, then president of the LDS California Mission. In the October 13, 1857 edition of Cannon's San Francisco newspaper \"The Western Standard\", Cannon responded to initial news reports of involvement by Mormons by charging the responsible journalists with writing \"reckless and malignant slanders\", despite knowing that the southern Utah Mormons were \"as innocent of [the massacre] as the child unborn\". The church's official newspaper in Salt Lake City, \"The Deseret News\", was initially slow to comment on the massacre,", "id": "22212632" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas the second-most senior apostle of the church after the death of Woodruff, Cannon did not become President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, as would be the practice in the LDS Church today. Rather, because Cannon was a member of the First Presidency, the church simply appointed the next senior apostle of the church—Brigham Young, Jr.—to be the quorum president. (Under today's practices, Cannon would have been appointed the president of the quorum and Young would have been appointed acting president.) Cannon", "id": "19825274" }, { "contents": "Clifford E. Young\n\n\nClifford Earle Young (December 7, 1883 – August 21, 1958) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1941 until his death. Young was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, the son of LDS Church leader Seymour B. Young. From 1905 to 1908, he served as a Mormon missionary in England and Germany. In 1928, Young became the president of the Alpine Stake of the LDS Church in Utah. In 1934, he joined the", "id": "8315768" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\n33. Upon his joining the Quorum of the Twelve, Cannon was called to preside over the church's European Mission. Cannon's mission in Europe ended when he was recalled by Young in 1862 to work in Washington, D.C., to assist in the church's promotion of Utah Territory's bid for statehood. At the adjournment of the 1862 congressional session, Cannon again left for Europe to preside over the mission. In this capacity, Cannon was the editor of the \"Millennial Star\" and, for a short time,", "id": "19825271" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nfrom the federal authorities. In September 1888, Cannon surrendered himself and pleaded guilty at trial to charges of unlawful cohabitation under the Edmunds Act. As a result, Cannon served nearly six months in Utah's federal penitentiary. Cannon was pardoned in 1894 by U.S. President Grover Cleveland. Cannon died on April 12, 1901, in Monterey, California, at 74 years of age. Had he lived a few months longer, he would have become the President of the LDS Church: Lorenzo Snow died on October 10 of that year", "id": "19825280" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Isle of Man\n\n\nand Idaho which descends from the 19th century marriage of George Cannon and Ann Quayle before their emigration from Peel, Isle of Man. The family's most notable member was their oldest son George Quayle Cannon. The family is connected by marriage to the Bennion, Taylor, Wells and Young political families. LDS Membership statistics as of January 1, 2011 for the Isle of Man. The nation of the Isle of Man does not have its own mission. Instead it is served by an English mission. Five out of the six", "id": "7797107" }, { "contents": "The Contributor (LDS magazine)\n\n\nThe Contributor was an independent publication associated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) between 1879 and 1896. It was a monthly periodical and sought to represent the Young Men's and Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Associations (YMMIA and YLMIA respectively), the youth organizations of the LDS Church at the time. It was founded by Junius F. Wells, the inaugural head of the YMMIA. Abraham H. Cannon became editor when the magazine was purchased by the Cannon Publishing Company in 1892. With the", "id": "505110" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe official organ of the Sunday School until 1930, when it was replaced with \"The Instructor\". Cannon also served as the first general superintendent of the church's Sunday School from 1867 until his death. On April 8, 1873, Cannon became a member of the church's First Presidency when he was called as the first counselor by Brigham Young. Cannon went on to serve as counselor to three more presidents of the church: he was First Counselor to John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow. Although Cannon", "id": "19825273" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\ntogether. Prior to her service in the general Primary presidency, Clara Cannon was a counselor in the presidencies of the Primary and Relief Society in the Salt Lake Stake of the LDS Church. When Louie B. Felt became the first general presidency of the Primary, Matilda M. Barratt and Cannon were selected as Felt's counselors. Cannon was a counselor until 1895; the next year she was succeeded in the position by Josephine R. West. Clara Moses Cannon died of throat cancer in Centerville, Utah, aged 87 and was interred in", "id": "10663424" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\nScouts of America and served in the organization's Great Salt Lake Council. Prior to his call as a general authority, Cannon served in the church as a bishop, stake president, patriarch, temple sealer, and regional representative. He was also the president of the church's Central British Mission from 1966 to 1969. From 1969 to 1972, Cannon was an assistant and counselor to W. Jay Eldredge, the general superintendent of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association. Cannon became a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy", "id": "8339580" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nthe Nauvoo Legion. During this time, Cannon served as printer of the \"Deseret News\" while it was publishing in exile in Fillmore, Utah. After the Utah War, he was called as president of the church's Eastern States Mission. The murder of Parley P. Pratt in 1857 created a vacancy in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. That vacancy was not filled until Brigham Young called Cannon to the apostleship three years later. Cannon was ordained to the priesthood office of apostle on August 26, 1860, at age", "id": "19825270" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nin the Sandwich Islands (later known as the Kingdom of Hawaii), where he served for four years. While in the islands, Cannon converted many Native Hawaiians. One of the most notable was Jonatana Napela, who assisted Cannon in translating the Book of Mormon into Hawaiian. Joseph F. Smith, a future church president, would follow Cannon and serve in Hawaii one year later. Returning to Utah Territory, Cannon married Elizabeth Hoagland (daughter of Abraham Hoagland and his wife.) He was almost immediately called to assist apostle", "id": "19825268" }, { "contents": "Ronald E. Poelman\n\n\nRonald Eugene Poelman (May 10, 1928 – November 19, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1978 until his death. In 1984, he delivered a controversial sermon in the LDS Church's general conference which the church redacted before publishing. Poelman was born in Salt Lake City, Utah to a Latter-day Saint family. As a young man, he served as a Mormon missionary in the LDS Church's Netherlands Mission. He began his", "id": "4765396" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\n. He would marry Martha Brown of Ogden in 1878. In 1891 he helped to organize the Utah Republican Party. After a failed bid to become delegate from the Utah Territory, he succeeded and served from March 4, 1895, to January 4, 1896. Cannon was chosen in 1896 to serve as senator by the Utah Legislature in spite of LDS church leadership favoring his father for the job. He served in the United States Senate, initially, as a member of the Republican Party; however, he later became a", "id": "11000346" }, { "contents": "Frank J. Cannon\n\n\nmember of the Silver Republican Party, founded by his successor (and future employer at \"The Salt Lake Tribune\") Thomas Kearns. Cannon lost re-election in 1899. Utah's state legislators indicated they would not support Cannon for re-election shortly after the November 1898 elections. Cannon had voted against the Dingley Act, which would have raised tariffs on sugar and helped the Utah sugar industry. It was strongly supported by the LDS Church hierarchy, who now opposed his re-election. Other factors were his support", "id": "11000347" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\nand Ghana. The first convert baptized in Africa was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and his wife were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' centre in Nauvoo, Illinois. For three months in 1989, Cannon was the interim president of the LDS Church's Germany Hamburg Mission; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. After his interim service as mission president, Cannon was the second president of the Frankfurt Germany Temple from 1989 to", "id": "9582827" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nCounselor to William B. Preston, the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church; he served in this position between 1884 and 1886. In 1884, shortly after Cannon had become a general authority, a sensationalized news story by Joseph Lippman in the \"Salt Lake Tribune\" alleged that Cannon had taken his wife's sister Louie Wells as a plural wife. Lippman suggested that Cannon and Wells had been married in the Logan Temple. In fact, there had been no such marriage, though it was later revealed that Cannon and Wells had", "id": "7202724" }, { "contents": "Janath R. Cannon\n\n\nbranches of the LDS Church in Nigeria and Ghana. The first convert baptized in Nigeria was Anthony Obinna. In the late 1980s, Cannon and her husband were the directors of the LDS Church's visitors' center in Nauvoo, Illinois. In 1989, they served as interim leaders of the Germany Hamburg Mission of the church; during this time, the regular president of the mission was working on getting Mormon missionaries admitted to East Germany. From 1989 to 1992, Cannon was the matron of the Frankfurt Germany Temple while her husband", "id": "9582966" }, { "contents": "George I. Cannon\n\n\n's Quorum of the Twelve. Abraham was a son of George Q. Cannon, an early member of the church's First Presidency. As a young man, Cannon served as a missionary in the church's Central States Mission. After his mission, he served in the United States Air Force during the Second World War. In 1946, he began attending Brigham Young University (BYU). After graduating from BYU, Cannon became a vice president of Beneficial Life Insurance Company in Salt Lake City. He was active in the Boy", "id": "8339579" }, { "contents": "Sylvester Q. Cannon\n\n\n1925, Cannon became the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church, succeeding Charles W. Nibley. Cannon's counselors were David A. Smith and John Wells. In 1938, Cannon was released as Presiding Bishop and was succeeded by LeGrand Richards. At the same time, Cannon was ordained an apostle and made an \"associate\" of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, a unique position that had never been filled before. When Quorum member Melvin J. Ballard died the next year, Cannon became a full member of the Quorum; he served", "id": "2194374" }, { "contents": "Clara C. M. Cannon\n\n\nClarissa Cordelia (\"Clara\") Moses Cannon (April 21, 1839 – August 21, 1926) was a Mormon pioneer and a member of the first-ever general presidency of the Primary organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). She was the second counselor to general president Louie B. Felt from 1880 to 1895. Clara Moses was born in Westfield, Massachusetts. In 1846 she took the six-month journey on the ship \"Brooklyn\" from New York City to San", "id": "10663422" }, { "contents": "Leonora Cannon Taylor\n\n\nLeonora Cannon Taylor (October 6, 1796–December 9, 1868) was a member of the Relief Society organization at the time of its origin and the first wife of John Taylor, the third president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). On October 6, 1796 in Peel, Isle of Man, Leonora Cannon was born to George Cannon and Leonora Callister. As the oldest daughter in the family, when Leonora's father died when she was thirteen she went away to London to work", "id": "16190675" }, { "contents": "Deseret Book Company\n\n\ntheir books, which were then distributed by others. However, Cannon & Sons distributed several important books through their stores and mail order (see table). The company had extensive ties to the LDS Church-owned newspaper, the \"Deseret News.\" Five of Cannon's sons held important positions in the paper, and Cannon himself was editor between 1867 and 1872, and again while temporarily owning the paper from 1892 to 1898. Nearly every George Q. Cannon & Sons book was printed on the \"Deseret News\" press", "id": "18344086" }, { "contents": "John Q. Cannon\n\n\nof the Utah Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Cannon was the oldest son of George Q. Cannon and the one most expected to follow in his prominent father's footsteps in politics, church office, and journalism. Heber J. Grant once said of Cannon: \"There probably is not a young man in the church who had had more opportunities and advantages extended to him educationally, spiritually, and every other way than John Q. Cannon.\" At the age of 27, Cannon was called to serve as the Second", "id": "7202723" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nMartha Maria \"Mattie\" Hughes Cannon (July 1, 1857 – July 10, 1932) was a Welsh-born immigrant to the United States, a polygamous wife, physician, Utah women's rights advocate and suffragist, and Utah State Senator. Her family immigrated to the United States as converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and traveled West to settle in Utah territory with other Mormons. She started working at the age of fourteen. At sixteen she enrolled in the University", "id": "15993465" }, { "contents": "Church Office Building\n\n\nThe Church Office Building is a 28-story building in Salt Lake City, Utah, which houses the administrative support staff for the lay ministry of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) throughout the world. The building is 420 ft (128 m) tall at roof level and is located within the Temple Square complex on the corner of North Temple and State Street. The building was designed by George Cannon Young at a cost of US$31 million to build. Construction took place from 1962 to 1972", "id": "13754819" }, { "contents": "John Lyman Smith\n\n\nJohn Lyman Smith (November 17, 1828 – February 21, 1898) was an American politician and Mormon missionary. He served as a member of the Utah Territory's Legislative Assembly's House of Representatives for Iron County, Utah, from 1852 to 1853, and the Great Salt Lake County, Utah, from 1853 to 1855. Cousin of the founder of the Latter Day Saint Movement, Joseph Smith, Smith was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) who traveled to the", "id": "18219861" }, { "contents": "Francis M. Lyman\n\n\nFrancis Marion Lyman (January 12, 1840 – November 18, 1916) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was the President of the Quorum from 1903 until his death. Lyman's father and son were also apostles in the church: his father was Amasa M. Lyman and his son was Richard R. Lyman. Both his father and son were excommunicated from the church while serving as apostles. Francis M. Lyman was born as", "id": "20761093" }, { "contents": "Angus M. Cannon\n\n\nAngus Munn Cannon (May 17, 1834 – June 7, 1915) was an early Latter Day Saint leader and Mormon pioneer. Cannon was born in Liverpool, Lancashire, England. His Manx parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 1840, being baptized by his uncle John Taylor. In 1842, the Cannon family went to Nauvoo, Illinois, United States. By 1849, they were in Utah Territory. Cannon was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon and their lives followed very similar paths up", "id": "7202650" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\naffairs while Taylor recovered. This training would serve him well in later life. Cannon's father died in 1845. In 1846, Taylor traveled to England to organize the affairs of the church after Smith's death. Meanwhile, Cannon accompanied Taylor's wife and family as they moved to Winter Quarters, Nebraska. When Taylor returned, Cannon traveled with the entire Taylor family to the Salt Lake Valley, arriving in October 1847. In 1849, Cannon was asked by church president Brigham Young to serve as a missionary for the church", "id": "19825267" }, { "contents": "Martha Hughes Cannon\n\n\nstaying in the position until December 31, 1903. Cannon attempted to prohibit children not vaccinated from attending school in case of a disease outbreak. The Board of Health sent out vaccines; however, the \"Deseret News\" spread information that vaccines weren't safe. LDS Church leaders were divided on the subject. One apostle, Brigham Young Jr. was very vocal in his opinions, writing in the \"Deseret News\" about the evils of vaccinations. The influence of the \"Deseret News\" and Mormon religious leaders limited how many", "id": "15993490" }, { "contents": "Billy Johnson (Mormon)\n\n\nLDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball announced Official Declaration 2 which extended the priesthood to all worthy male members of the church regardless of race or color. In gratitude, Johnson sent a letter to Kimball, explaining that God had prepared the people in Ghana, asking him to send missionaries to the members. Kimball responded to his pleas and sent the first called missionaries Rendell N. Mabey and Rachel Mabey. They joined Edwin Q. Cannon and Janath R. Cannon. Johnson was finally baptized into the LDS Church on December 9, 1978. He", "id": "4108521" }, { "contents": "Juvenile Instructor\n\n\ncatechisms on the Bible, Book of Mormon, and Doctrine and Covenants; musical compositions; illustrations; stories; editorial teachings; and other aids to gospel instruction. It was the first magazine for children published in the United States west of the Mississippi River. For much of its history, \"The Juvenile Instructor\" was owned by the Cannon family. Its first editor was George Q. Cannon, an apostle in the LDS Church. Cannon and his family continued to publish the magazine privately until January 1, 1901, when the", "id": "9210614" }, { "contents": "Joseph F. Smith\n\n\nand as second counselor to Lorenzo Snow (1898–1901). Smith was appointed first counselor to Snow on the death of first counselor George Q. Cannon, but, as Snow himself died only four days later, Smith never served in that position. He succeeded Snow as president of the LDS Church and president of the Salt Lake Temple. He served as president of the temple until 1911, when he transferred the responsibility to Anthon H. Lund. Smith also served as editor of the \"Improvement Era\" and \"Juvenile Instructor\",", "id": "4117444" }, { "contents": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in California\n\n\nQ. Cannon began publication in San Francisco of the \"Western Standard\", a weekly periodical supportive of the Church. The first colonization from Utah to California came in 1851 when a company of about 450 saints and slaves under direction of Elders Amasa M. Lyman and Charles C. Rich of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles settled at what is now San Bernardino. The colony was the final settlement in a string of Mormon communities extending from Salt Lake City in an area known as Deseret. The community thrived, and on July 6,", "id": "22187256" }, { "contents": "Sunday School (LDS Church)\n\n\nout. On November 11, 1867, Young and church leaders Daniel H. Wells, George A. Smith, Wilford Woodruff, George Q. Cannon, and Brigham Young, Jr. met and organized the Parent Sunday School Union. Young appointed Cannon as the first general superintendent of the Sunday School, a position he would hold until his death in 1901. In 1872, the Sunday School organization was renamed the Deseret Sunday School Union. The organized Sunday School addressed lesson topics and source materials, grading, prizes and rewards, use of hymns", "id": "8671425" }, { "contents": "Hugh W. Pinnock\n\n\nHugh Wallace Pinnock (January 15, 1934 – December 16, 2000) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Pinnock was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Western States Mission. Pinnock graduated from University of Utah in 1958, where he became a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity and Owl and Key. Prior to his call to the First", "id": "8519001" }, { "contents": "Charles W. Penrose\n\n\nwas organized Penrose was called as a member of the high council. In 1877, Penrose became the assistant editor of the LDS Church-owned \"Deseret News\" in Salt Lake City, working under George Q. Cannon. Penrose was known for his writing, including missionary tracts and lyrics of Latter-day Saint hymns, including \"God of Our Fathers\", \"O Ye Mountains High\", and \"Up, Awake, Ye Defenders of Zion\". In 1880, Penrose became the editor-in-chief of", "id": "2194239" }, { "contents": "Rulon S. Wells\n\n\nRulon Seymour Wells (July 7, 1854 – May 7, 1941) was a Utah politician and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1893 until his death. Wells was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to LDS Church leader Daniel H. Wells (1814–1891) and Louisa Free (1824–1886). In 1875, Wells travelled to Europe as a Mormon missionary and worked primarily in Germany and Switzerland. He returned to the United States in 1877. On", "id": "8315459" }, { "contents": "G. Homer Durham\n\n\nGeorge Homer Durham (February 4, 1911 – January 10, 1985) was an American academic administrator and was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1977 until his death. Durham was born in Parowan, Utah, and was raised in Salt Lake City. As a boy in grade school, he met and became lifelong friends with future LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley. As a young man, Durham served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the British", "id": "21588256" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nJonatana Napela or Jonathan Hawaii Napela (first name also spelled Iohatana, full name Napelakapuonamahanaonaleleonalani) (September 11, 1813 – August 6, 1879) was one of the earliest Hawaiian converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Hawaii, joining in the 1830s. He helped translate the Book of Mormon into the Hawaiian language, as \"Ka Buke a Moramona,\" working with missionary George Q. Cannon. Napela was appointed to serve as a superintendent of the colony at Kalaupapa, Molokai", "id": "16647246" }, { "contents": "Richfield, Utah\n\n\nserves about 600 students per year. As in most settled areas of rural Utah, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) plays a prominent role. The Mormons were highly industrious colonizers. From 1847, when they founded Salt Lake City, until 1877, they founded 360 towns. Following direction from Brigham Young, Latter-day Saints founded the town and outlying hamlets about 150 years ago. Members of the LDS Church are predominant among the residents. Even in this heart of Mormon country,", "id": "11082836" }, { "contents": "Marvin O. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Owen Ashton (April 8, 1883 – October 7, 1946) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1938 until his death. Prior to becoming a general authority, Ashton was a prominent local leader of the LDS Church in Salt Lake City, Utah. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory to Mormon parents. He married Rachel Grace Jeremy in 1906 and in 1907 went to England as a missionary for the LDS Church. He returned", "id": "14505232" }, { "contents": "LeGrand Richards\n\n\nLeGrand Richards (February 6, 1886 – January 11, 1983) was a prominent missionary and leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He served as the seventh presiding bishop of the LDS Church from 1938 to 1952, and was then called as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles by church president David O. McKay. Richards served in the Quorum of the Twelve until his death in Salt Lake City, Utah, at the age of 96. Richards was born in", "id": "2294374" }, { "contents": "Jonatana Napela\n\n\nwas educated at Lahainaluna School. Napela was trained as a lawyer. He was serving as a judge in Wailuku, Hawaii, when he met American George Q. Cannon, a member of the LDS Church on a missionary trip to Hawaii. After Napela's conversion in the 1830s to the LDS Church, the government forced the judge to resign from his position. The LDS Church was regarded with suspicion. LDS Church historian Andrew Jensen said that Napela \"did splendid missionary work for the Church.\" Napela was sent on a specific", "id": "16647248" }, { "contents": "Gardo House\n\n\ncounselor George Q. Cannon and other church leaders suggested that Taylor occupy the Gardo House after its completion, but he repeatedly refused. However, when church members unanimously voted on April 9, 1879, to make the Gardo House the official parsonage for LDS Church presidents, Taylor reluctantly accepted their decision. Moses Thatcher, William Jennings, and Angus M. Cannon were appointed as a committee to oversee completion of the mansion. On December 27, 1881, the Deseret News published a letter from John Taylor announcing a public reception and tour of", "id": "1496184" }, { "contents": "Lucy Grant Cannon\n\n\nStates Mission of the church in 1901. In 1902, Grant married George J. Cannon. In 1923, Cannon was asked to succeed Mae Taylor Nystrom as the second counselor to Martha Horne Tingey, the general president of what was then called the Young Ladies' Mutual Improvement Association. In 1929, when Ruth May Fox succeeded Tingey, Cannon was asked to be her first counselor. Cannon served in this capacity until 1929, when Fox was released and Cannon was selected by her father, who was President of the Church, to", "id": "1681854" }, { "contents": "Edwin Q. Cannon\n\n\n. (At the time, Cannon was a counselor to James E. Faust in the church's International Mission, which had jurisdiction over all areas of the world not otherwise part of a mission.) After Bateman and Cannon reported the results of their trip, Cannon and his wife were called and set apart as the first Mormon missionaries to black Africa. They—along with Rendell and Rachel Mabey—preached in Nigeria and Ghana, baptized hundreds of converts, and established 35 branches and 5 districts of the LDS Church in Nigeria", "id": "9582826" }, { "contents": "Marion D. Hanks\n\n\nMarion Duff Hanks (October 13, 1921 – August 5, 2011) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1953 until his death. Hanks was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. As a young man he served in the Northern States Mission of the LDS Church, which was headquartered in Chicago. He was in the United States Navy during World War II and received a J.D. from the University of Utah. Prior to his call as a general authority", "id": "6558935" }, { "contents": "Lillie T. Freeze\n\n\nthe Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association (YLMIA). In this capacity, she was invited to speak at the Salt Lake Tabernacle on April 6, 1880, at a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the LDS Church's founding. In 1880, Lillie Freeze was one of the founding members of the LDS Church's Primary Association. Freeze was appointed as the first secretary of the general presidency, which was composed of Louie B. Felt, Matilda M. Barratt, and Clara C. M. Cannon. Freeze was secretary until 1888, when", "id": "10906695" }, { "contents": "Henry D. Taylor\n\n\nHenry Dixon Taylor (November 22, 1903 – February 24, 1987) was a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1958 until his death. Taylor was born in Provo, Utah. As a young man, he served as a missionary for the LDS Church in the Eastern States Mission. During his mission, Taylor was the president of the church's Connecticut District. Taylor received a bachelor's degree from Brigham Young University (BYU) and a master's degree", "id": "2477100" }, { "contents": "George Q. Cannon\n\n\nwas elected to be the non-voting delegate for Utah Territory in the United States Congress in 1872. He remained a congressional delegate until 1882, when his seat was declared vacant by the enactment of the Edmunds Act, which terminated many political and civil rights for Utah's Mormon polygamists. By 1880, Cannon had served four terms in Congress as Territorial Delegate. The newly appointed anti-Mormon territorial governor, Eli Houston Murray, openly supported the Liberal Party, which generally opposed church candidates. The 1880 territory-wide election", "id": "19825275" }, { "contents": "George F. Richards\n\n\nGeorge Franklin Richards (February 23, 1861 – August 8, 1950) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from April 9, 1906 until his death. He also served as Acting Presiding Patriarch of the LDS Church from 1937 to 1942 and President of the Quorum of the Twelve from May 25, 1945 until his death. Richards was born in Farmington, Utah Territory, the son of Franklin D. Richards and Nanny Longstroth. Richards", "id": "2194252" }, { "contents": "Abraham H. Cannon\n\n\n1882, at the age of 23, Cannon assumed business control of the \"Juvenile Instructor\" and associated publications. He continued his management until his death. In October 1892, Cannon and his brother John Q. Cannon took control of the \"Deseret News\" publishing. He also became the editor and publisher of \"The Contributor\". On October 9, 1882, Cannon became a member of the First Seven Presidents of the Seventy of the church. On October 7, 1889, church president Wilford Woodruff named Cannon a member", "id": "9035316" }, { "contents": "Howard Cannon\n\n\nHis grandfather David Cannon, was the younger brother of George Q. Cannon, and a leading figure in the building of the St. George Temple, who was later the third president of that temple. His father Walter Cannon was one of David Cannon's 31 children. Howard's parents had married in 1909, his mother was Leah Sullivan. When Cannon was two years old his father left for England to served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for two years. Cannon went to Woodward School in", "id": "18060013" }, { "contents": "Mormon fiction\n\n\nMormons were generally non-fiction, including scripture, missionary tracts, and doctrinal literature. In 1844, Parley P. Pratt published what is commonly cited as the first work of LDS fiction, the didactic \"Dialogue between Joseph Smith and the Devil\". It was first published in the New York Herald. Early Mormon leaders like Brigham Young and George Q. Cannon condemned novels for wasting time, a rhetoric that persisted until the 1880s. Fiction among LDS Church members developed once the Mormons had settled in Utah and developed a degree of", "id": "453087" }, { "contents": "Marvin J. Ashton\n\n\nMarvin Jeremy Ashton (May 6, 1915 – February 25, 1994) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1971 until his death. Ashton was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was the son of Marvin O. Ashton, a local LDS leader, who later became a church general authority. The younger Ashton worked in the lumber business as a youth. He graduated from the University of Utah. He served a", "id": "19825413" }, { "contents": "Rudger Clawson\n\n\nRudger Judd Clawson (March 12, 1857 – June 21, 1943) was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1898 until his death in 1943. He also served as President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 1921 until his death and as a member of the First Presidency of the LDS Church for five days in 1901. Clawson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory, to Hiram Bradley Clawson and Margaret Judd", "id": "9035430" }, { "contents": "Utah-Idaho Sugar Company\n\n\npayment and a $130,000 loan. Cutler also went to Chicago and New York City to secure loans from banks; he came back, via train, with a bag full of money, as he did not think any banks in Utah could have cashed the large bank draft. The LDS church made more payments and secured more loans. In addition, George Q. Cannon and Heber J. Grant personally funded the enterprise. Joseph F. Smith, president of the LDS Church, gave a sermon in 1893 explaining that this was done to", "id": "1319991" }, { "contents": "President of the Church (LDS Church)\n\n\nthe President of the Quorum. When Woodruff died, his counselors returned to the Quorum based on the date they were ordained an apostle, placing George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith below Brigham Young Jr. and John Willard Young. Heber J. Grant objected to that arguing that seniority should be based on ordination to the Quorum rather than ordination as an apostle. Young argued that an apostle should not be demoted as long as he is worthy of the position. On March 31, 1900, Snow met with his counselors, Cannon and", "id": "16343191" }, { "contents": "Alfred W. McCune\n\n\n. Judge Orlando Powers, Associate Justice of the Utah Supreme Court, said in 1906 that he understood that McCune was not a Mormon. Frank J. Cannon, too, claimed McCune was not a Mormon, and B. H. Roberts, LDS Church historian and member of the First Council of the Seventy, said in 1930 that McCune was not a church member. Historian Orvin Malmquist, however, says that church records show he was baptized into the LDS Church at the age of eight in 1857, and that his marriage to Elizabeth", "id": "15062757" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 [START_ENT] Liga Leumit [END_ENT] season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
33b9d1a2-6671-4d56-98bb-eb5f4cbdc7fb_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:0
[{"answer": "Liga Leumit", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "5695086", "title": "Liga Leumit"}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the [START_ENT] Israel Football Association [END_ENT] 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
3ce4df86-91a9-41da-8e1b-2d3627c081c0_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:1
[{"answer": "Israel Football Association", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "1265525", "title": "Israel Football Association"}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season [START_ENT] SK Nes Tziona [END_ENT] and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
a12f08a2-8d0a-4736-83f2-787889ddf430_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:2
[{"answer": "Sektzia Nes Tziona F.C.", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "6059253", "title": "Sektzia Nes Tziona F.C."}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and [START_ENT] Hapoel Mahane Yehuda [END_ENT] were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
4aebf721-e5f9-4931-9c1f-3f113a9c9fc2_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:3
[{"answer": "Hapoel Mahane Yehuda F.C.", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "19444834", "title": "Hapoel Mahane Yehuda F.C."}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to [START_ENT] Liga Alef [END_ENT] . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
4aa87f47-0a64-4e91-a134-6d81d9dbb4ab_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:4
[{"answer": "Liga Alef", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "7470766", "title": "Liga Alef"}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by [START_ENT] Hapoel Kfar Saba [END_ENT] and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
546df1c5-8289-45bd-9206-d5ba213555f1_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:5
[{"answer": "Hapoel Kfar Saba F.C.", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "5130676", "title": "Hapoel Kfar Saba F.C."}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and [START_ENT] Beitar Jerusalem [END_ENT] . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
bca1ad54-1629-4abe-a258-997c348a4a8a_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:6
[{"answer": "Beitar Jerusalem F.C.", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "1755537", "title": "Beitar Jerusalem F.C."}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , [START_ENT] Maccabi Tel Aviv [END_ENT] entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
8a7db14b-493e-4e5d-a8b0-36c33446a780_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:7
[{"answer": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "861284", "title": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C."}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . [START_ENT] Maccabi Netanya 's [END_ENT] Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
be988cea-fc39-4a99-901a-4105fd38b69f_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:8
[{"answer": "Maccabi Netanya F.C.", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "5046198", "title": "Maccabi Netanya F.C."}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's [START_ENT] Mordechai Spiegler [END_ENT] was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
346a687d-c46c-4497-b50d-cddb2689e73c_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:9
[{"answer": "Mordechai Spiegler", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "2611690", "title": "Mordechai Spiegler"}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the [START_ENT] Knesset [END_ENT] . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
de45392d-fe95-4b09-b255-4936b31b6695_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:10
[{"answer": "Knesset", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "74656", "title": "Knesset"}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the [START_ENT] Maccabi [END_ENT] ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
09de7924-db41-4dbe-bf3c-eeca6e690d94_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:11
[{"answer": "Maccabi World Union", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "7209569", "title": "Maccabi World Union"}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( [START_ENT] Haifa [END_ENT] , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
7fdc7264-9590-4abb-80e4-45bf0acd1174_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:12
[{"answer": "Maccabi Haifa F.C.", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "319872", "title": "Maccabi Haifa F.C."}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , [START_ENT] Maccabi Jaffa [END_ENT] , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
a7d3a8d9-ad7d-4336-a153-46139a0ecdd1_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:13
[{"answer": "Maccabi Jaffa F.C.", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "11534927", "title": "Maccabi Jaffa F.C."}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , [START_ENT] Netanya [END_ENT] , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
8c2a72b4-6697-4ff4-ba84-8bd10e2a05ed_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:14
[{"answer": "Maccabi Netanya F.C.", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "5046198", "title": "Maccabi Netanya F.C."}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , [START_ENT] Sha'arayim [END_ENT] and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
dcb7ca7b-6557-4a6a-ad63-d27fdbd3cf9f_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:15
[{"answer": "Maccabi Sha'arayim F.C.", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "19623772", "title": "Maccabi Sha'arayim F.C."}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and [START_ENT] Tel Aviv [END_ENT] ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
6b98d9af-0a5d-4624-9314-f266a2fff6f2_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:16
[{"answer": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "861284", "title": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C."}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and [START_ENT] Hapoel [END_ENT] ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
51b078e4-100c-418e-9d06-796a4d5b9ec0_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:17
[{"answer": "Hapoel", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "3056923", "title": "Hapoel"}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( [START_ENT] Be'er Sheva [END_ENT] , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
1bfe5e04-8e38-4581-ae4c-00a92f0ff3cd_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:18
[{"answer": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "5834903", "title": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C."}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , [START_ENT] Haifa [END_ENT] , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
38797728-44f3-4a89-9c0e-876e8daae4ed_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:19
[{"answer": "Hapoel Haifa F.C.", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "2869548", "title": "Hapoel Haifa F.C."}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , [START_ENT] Jerusalem [END_ENT] , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
0ed2f82f-79e3-4bd6-a430-466e804a2e35_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:20
[{"answer": "Hapoel Jerusalem F.C.", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "5834227", "title": "Hapoel Jerusalem F.C."}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , [START_ENT] Mahane Yehuda [END_ENT] , Petah Tikva , and Tel Aviv
538e0e4c-c811-4ed3-b4b3-2c8153f9b379_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:21
[{"answer": "Hapoel Mahane Yehuda F.C.", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "19444834", "title": "Hapoel Mahane Yehuda F.C."}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , [START_ENT] Petah Tikva [END_ENT] , and Tel Aviv
d59a2768-2426-42db-a09c-45c8e50ff414_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:22
[{"answer": "Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C.", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "5166496", "title": "Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C."}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
The 1966 -- 68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league 's history , and is notable for the Israel Football Association 's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches . The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season , effectively combining two seasons into one , leading it to be known as the double season ( , HaOna HaKfula ) . At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef . Neither team has returned to the top flight since . They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem . As champions , Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the , which they won . Maccabi Netanya 's Mordechai Spiegler was the season 's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966 -- 67 and 23 in 1967 -- 68 . The season began with a protests from relegated players , with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset . In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised , the IFA decided to spread the league games over two years instead of one . The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field , reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play , as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation . The double season format involved all the Maccabi ( Haifa , Maccabi Jaffa , Netanya , Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv ) and Hapoel ( Be'er Sheva , Haifa , Jerusalem , Mahane Yehuda , Petah Tikva , and [START_ENT] Tel Aviv [END_ENT]
47fff890-9d5c-4862-90be-7ad7f28fdf74_1966–68_Liga_Leumi:23
[{"answer": "Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C.", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "2301245", "title": "Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C."}]}]
[ { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\ngames over two years instead of one. The main objectives were to put an end to the riots on the field, reducing trouble at matches and improve the quality of play, as well as infusing new blood into teams by alleviating the immediate fear of relegation. The double season format involved all the Maccabi (Haifa, Maccabi Jaffa, Netanya, Sha'arayim and Tel Aviv) and Hapoel (Be'er Sheva, Haifa, Jerusalem, Mahane Yehuda, Petah Tikva, Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv) teams playing amongst themselves at the start", "id": "14245309" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nreturned to the top flight since. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Beitar Jerusalem. As champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv entered the 1969 Asian Club Championship, which they won. Maccabi Netanya's Mordechai Spiegler was the season's top scorer with 38 goals - 15 during 1966–67 and 23 in 1967–68. The season began with a protests from relegated players, with the uproar reaching as far as the Knesset. In an attempt to restore order to the game and solve the issues raised, the IFA decided to spread the league", "id": "14245308" }, { "contents": "1966–68 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1966–68 Liga Leumit season was the thirteenth in the league's history, and is notable for the Israel Football Association's decision to play it over two years as a play to combat corruption and increasing violence at matches. The sixteen teams played each other four times during the season, effectively combining two seasons into one, leading it to be known as the double season (, \"HaOna HaKfula\"). At the end of the season SK Nes Tziona and Hapoel Mahane Yehuda were relegated to Liga Alef. Neither team has", "id": "14245307" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nseason lasting two years. During the 1970s and 1980s, six teams won their first championships; Maccabi Netanya took four titles between 1970 and 1980 while Hapoel Be'er Sheva won two back-to-back in 1974–75 and 1975–76. Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Haifa, Beitar Jerusalem and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv all won their first titles during the 1980s. After Bnei Yehuda's victory in 1989–90, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem dominated the remainder of the top-flight Liga Leumit era, winning every title except the", "id": "21538851" }, { "contents": "1985–86 Liga Leumit\n\n\nIn the 1985–86 Liga Leumit season Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title. Hapoel Haifa, Hapoel Jerusalem and Maccabi Sha'arayim were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Uri Malmilian of Beitar Jerusalem and Doron Rabinzon of Maccabi Petah Tikva were the league's joint top scorers with 14 goals. The league championship was decided on the final day, with a match between the two title chasers, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Tel Aviv. Hapoel Tel Aviv, who needed a win to secure the championship, scored a controversial goal in the 86th minute to win", "id": "20100723" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1955–56 Liga Leumit season was the first edition of Liga Leumit, which had replaced Liga Alef as the top division of football in Israel and the 17th season of top flight football under the IFA. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title. Avraham Levi from Beitar Tel Aviv and Michael Michaelov from Hapoel Tel Aviv were the league's joint top scorers with 16 goals each. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Rehovot were relegated automatically, whilst Maccabi Jaffa finished third from bottom and entered a promotion/relegatgion play-off with Liga Alef champions", "id": "18773465" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Leumit\n\n\nArtzit would play against before last (13th) place in Liga Leumit in a Playoff to see which team is to play in the premier league. The three teams from Liga Artzit that were promoted at the end of the previous season: Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba. The team relegated was Beitar Tel Aviv. br A promotion-relegation play-off between the 13th-placed team in Liga Leumit, Hapoel Haifa, and the 4th team in Liga Artzit, Shimshon Tel Aviv. Hapoel Haifa won", "id": "14768057" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Liga Leumit was the 16th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 73rd season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2013–14 season, the three promoted teams from 2013–14 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Petah Tikva, were promoted to the 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv were directly relegated to the 2014–15 Liga", "id": "2480799" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nmatches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played", "id": "15191400" }, { "contents": "Elnatan Salami\n\n\nElnatan Salami (, born April 5, 1986) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Mahane Yehuda. He previously played for Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Herzliya, Maccabi Netanya, Hapoel Acre, Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla, Hapoel Afula, F.C. Shikun HaMizrah, Sektzia Nes Tziona and Hapoel Kfar Saba. At international level, Salami was capped at levels from under-17 to under-21. Salami has started his career in Hapoel Petah Tikva youth club and in the 2003/04 season he was promoted to the senior team. Salami won the Toto", "id": "17457645" }, { "contents": "1954–55 in Israeli football\n\n\nseason and reprieving Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Balfouria from relegation. During the first half of the season, as no league matches were played, Hapoel Tel Aviv organized a league competition for the top Tel Aviv teams, Hapoel, Maccabi, Beitar and Maccabi Jaffa. The competition was played as a double round-robin tournament, with the top placed team winning the cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer, Yosef Shapira. League matches were delayed until 6 February 1955, and by the time the IFA had gone to", "id": "10025844" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1951–52 season was the first edition of Liga Alef, which had replaced the Israeli League as the top division of football in Israel following a year-long hiatus. It took place between October 1951 to June 1952 and was contested by 12 clubs, the same ones which had played in the top flight during the 1949–50 season minus Maccabi Nes Tziona. Maccabi Tel Aviv won their second consecutive championship, whilst the two Rishon LeZion clubs, Hapoel and Maccabi were relegated. Maccabi Tel Aviv's Yehoshua Glazer was the top scorer with", "id": "18571961" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven titles in the league's 17 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added four to their total while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the", "id": "9345988" }, { "contents": "1987–88 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1987–88 Liga Leumit season saw the league experiment with a split-league system. After the first two rounds (26 matches), the league split, with the top eight clubs forming a \"Championship group\" and the bottom six forming a \"Relegation group\". Within the groups, the clubs played each other once more. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title whilst Hapoel Lod and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to Liga Artzit. Zahi Armeli of Maccabi Haifa was the league's top scorer with 25 goals. The following", "id": "20100730" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\nsecond edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the competition was delayed after the teams playing only two matches each, as the third round matches were postponed due to weather conditions and then due to the 1954–55 Israel State Cup final, which involved Maccabi Tel Aviv and", "id": "15441158" }, { "contents": "2016–17 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2016–17 Israeli Premier League was the eighteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 75th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 20 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017. Hapoel Be'er Sheva won a back-to-back title, finishing 13 points ahead of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2015–16 season and two promoted teams from the 2015–16 Liga Leumit. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre were relegated to the 2016–17 Liga Leumit", "id": "18101982" }, { "contents": "2017–18 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2017–18 Liga Leumit was the 19th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 76th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2016–17 season, the two promoted teams from 2016–17 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2016–17 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya and Hapoel Acre, were promoted to the 2017–18 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba were relegated after finishing as the two bottom-placed", "id": "18422652" }, { "contents": "Eliezer Spiegel\n\n\nBet (third division). Spiegel then had spells in Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Hadera, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Shimshon Tel Aviv before coaching Beitar Netanya for three years. In 1965 Spiegel moved to coach Maccabi Tel Aviv, where his son, Giora, was playing at the time. In September 1966, Spiegel was fired from Maccabi Tel Aviv, as the team's players demanded that he would be replaced and Spiegel returned to coach Beitar Netanya. In summer 1967 Spiegel began to coach Maccabi Sha'arayim and", "id": "7828554" }, { "contents": "1998–99 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1998–99 Liga Leumit season began on 22 August 1998 and ended on 29 May 1999, with Hapoel Haifa winning their first championship title ever. That season had two rounds, each team played the other teams twice. The three teams that were relegated to Liga Artzit were: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Beit She'an and Maccabi Jaffa. Two team from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Tzafririm Holon and Maccabi Jaffa. The two teams relegated were: Hapoel Ashkelon and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Tel", "id": "17964199" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nthe league. 11 teams from the North Division (Hapoel Balfouria, Hapoel Hadera, Hakoah Haifa, Hapoel Netanya, Hapoel Kiryat Haim, Maccabi Zikhron Ya'akov, Degel Yehuda Haifa, S.C. Atlit, Maccabi Hadera, Hapoel Dror Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Ata) and 8 teams from the South Division (Hapoel Kfar Saba, Maccabi Ramat Gan, Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Jerusalem, Hapoel Rehovot, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Ra'anana and Hapoel Herzliya) have done so. Maccabi Nes Tziona, who finished bottom of the 1949–50 Israeli League was", "id": "15702843" }, { "contents": "1951–52 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1951–52 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Balfouria (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Kfar Saba (champions of the South Division) promoted to Liga Alef. Hapoel Kfar Ata of the North Division, Maccabi Nes Tziona and Hapoel HaNamal Jaffa of the South Division were all relegated. Hapoel HaNamal Haifa relegated following suspension, whilst Beitar Netanya and Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov both withdrew from the league during season. thus, also relegated to Liga Gimel. All active teams that have played in the aborted 1947–48 Liga Bet were invited to join", "id": "15702842" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\ndramatic goal in a 1–0 win over Maccabi Haifa in the final round, but due to her opponent's victory in the Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv team, the team dropped to the second division after 27 consecutive years in the Liga Leumit, , The number of high duty rates in its history in one season in the Liga Leumit. In preparation for the 1998–99 season, in the Liga Artzit, Shiye Feigenbaum was appointed coach of the team, and during the season was replaced by Gili Landau. The team struggled with Maccabi Netanya", "id": "9346572" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\ntitles in the league's 20 seasons, the most successful club during this period is Maccabi Haifa; during the same period Maccabi Tel Aviv have added five to their total, Hapoel Be'er Sheva added two championships, while Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv have won two championships each. Although Hapoel Tel Aviv have only finished top of the league twice since 1999—in 1999–2000 and ten years later in 2009–10—they have won the double on both occasions. This achievement was matched by Beitar Jerusalem in 2007–08. Ironi Kiryat Shmona won their first championship during", "id": "21538853" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\n, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 36, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 26, Beitar Jerusalem with 23, Bnei Yehuda with 23 and F.C. Ashdod started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Bnei Sakhnin started with 21 points, Hapoel Be'er Sheva with 20, Maccabi Netanya with 18 and Maccabi Petah Tikva started with 18. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus,", "id": "4265406" }, { "contents": "1986–87 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1986–87 Liga Leumit season saw Beitar Jerusalem win their first title. Maccabi Yavne, Maccabi Jaffa and Beitar Netanya (in their first, and to date only season in the top division) were all relegated to Liga Artzit. Eli Yani of Hapoel Kfar Saba was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. On 1 September 1986 the IFA board confirmed a proposal through which the number of teams in Liga Leumit would decrease to 14 teams. For this season three teams would relegate to Liga Artzit (as it was in previous", "id": "20100729" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nthe final 6 rounds being played during September and October 1955. In October and November, while the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. Maccabi Haifa, Hapoel Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Tel Aviv played for the Shapira Cup, named after former Hapoel Tel Aviv treasurer Yosef Shapira. The competition was designed to be played as a double round-robin tournament but the", "id": "14725718" }, { "contents": "1992–93 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1992–93 Liga Artzit season saw Maccabi Herzliya, Ironi Ashdod and Hapoel Kfar Saba promoted to Liga Leumit, the former two for the first time in their histories. Hapoel Ramat Gan and Maccabi Sha'arayim were relegated to Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Petah Tikva. Fourth-placed Maccabi Jaffa played-off against Hapoel Petah Tikva, who had finished eleventh in Liga Leumit. Hapoel won both legs to remain in the top division.", "id": "14496737" }, { "contents": "1988–89 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1988–89 Liga Leumit season began in September 1988 and ended in June 1989. After the first two rounds of matches (26 matches) the league split into two groups; a \"Championship group\" of six clubs and a \"Relegation group\" of eight clubs, who played the other clubs in their group once more. Maccabi Haifa won their third title, whilst Hapoel Tiberias, Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv (a year after winning the title) were all relegated. Benny Tabak of Maccabi Tel Aviv was the league", "id": "17741724" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Herzliya F.C.\n\n\nLiga Bet, the second division. In 1953–54 they were relegated. the club returned to Liga Alef in the 1960–61 season, and relegated after one season to Liga Bet. However, in the Israel State Cup, the club made history, after they eliminated Maccabi Jaffa, Beitar Jerusalem and Beitar Tel Aviv, and reached the Semi-finals, where they lost to the Israeli champions at the time, Hapoel Petah Tikva, in a result of 0–4. in the 1962–63 season, they returned to Liga Alef after winning promotion", "id": "15891485" }, { "contents": "1953–54 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1953–54 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tel Aviv were crowned champions for the third successive time, whilst Eliezer Spiegel of Maccabi Petah Tikva was the league's top scorer with 16 goals. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded to 14 clubs in the following season. Although league matches ended on 13 March 1954, the confirmation of the league's final standings was delayed, as a match between Maccabi Haifa and Maccabi Petah Tikva, which was played on 26 December 1953 and ended with a 3–2 win for Haifa, was", "id": "18640226" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nlast; the 1998–99 championship was won by first-time victors Hapoel Haifa. When the Israeli Premier League became the top division of Israeli football in 1999–2000, Liga Leumit became the second division. Since then, only six clubs have won the title; Hapoel Tel Aviv, Ironi Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem. Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Beitar Jerusalem are sometimes referred to as the \"Big Four\" of Israeli football. Having won seven", "id": "21538852" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nwhile the promotion playoffs and the State Cup were being played, two cup competitions were organized by Liga Leumit Clubs, the second edition of the Shapira Cup, and the Netanya 25th Anniversary Cup. The Shapira Cup, in which Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Petah Tikva participated, was abandoned after two rounds of play. Maccabi Netanya, Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan took part in a second cup competition, dedicated to the 25th anniversary of Netanya. After more than", "id": "10084695" }, { "contents": "1968–69 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1968–69 Liga Bet season saw Beitar Kiryat Tiv'on, Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Bat Yam and Hapoel Eilat win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. 1. Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba merged with Liga Gimel club, Hapoel Tel Mond, to form Hapoel Ya'akov Tel Mond. 2. Beitar Petah Tikva merged with Liga Gimel club, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, to form Beitar Petah Tikva\\Mahane Yehuda Hapoel Shefayim folded during the season. 1. Maccabi Ramat Gan merged with Liga Gimel club, Maccabi Ramat Hashikma, to form Maccabi HaShikma", "id": "13447506" }, { "contents": "2010–11 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nup) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Maccabi Haifa started with 35 points, Hapoel Tel Aviv with 33, Maccabi Tel Aviv with 25, Ironi Kiryat Shmona with 24, Bnei Yehuda with 24 and Maccabi Netanya started with 22. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Haifa started with 22 points, Maccabi Petah Tikva with 21, Hapoel Acre with 21 and Hapoel Be'er Sheva started with 19. The points obtained during the", "id": "6304011" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Liga Leumit was the 17th season as second tier since its re-alignment in 1999 and the 74th season of second-tier football in Israel. A total of sixteen teams were contesting in the league, including eleven sides from the 2014–15 season, the three promoted teams from 2014–15 Liga Alef and the two relegated teams from 2014–15 Israeli Premier League. Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv and Hapoel Kfar Saba, were promoted to the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League. Hapoel Petah Tikva and FC Ashdod were directly relegated to the 2015–16 Liga Leumit", "id": "21856567" }, { "contents": "List of Israeli football champions\n\n\nAviv won the first two of the championships held under this name, whilst the 1954–55 ended with the championship leaving Tel Aviv for the first time since the first league season, 1931–32; Hapoel Petah Tikva finished the season top of the league while Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv came in second and third place respectively The inaugural Liga Leumit season, 1955–56, ended with the championship won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, which have won two of the next three titles and Hapoel Tel Aviv one. Hapoel Petah Tikva then finished in second place three", "id": "21538849" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. season\n\n\nits 8th championship title. During the season, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Hapoel Hadera and Maccabi Haifa to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Maccabi Tel Aviv played two international friendly matches, losing both. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with", "id": "14725717" }, { "contents": "1962–63 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1962–63 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Petah Tikva crowned champions for the fifth successive season, a record which remains unbeaten. Hapoel's Zecharia Ratzabi was the league's top scorer with 12 goals. No club was relegated at the end of the season, as the league was expanded to 15 clubs the following season. During the season, several cases of match fixing were rumored to happen, most notably after a match played on 16 March 1963 between Maccabi Jaffa and Maccabi Petah Tikva (in which Maccabi Petah Tikva won 3–1)", "id": "20100668" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Acre (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Sha'arayim (champions of the South Division) win their regional divisions, and qualify with the second-placed clubs, Shimshon Tel Aviv and Hapoel Marmorek for promotion play-offs against the bottom two clubs in Liga Leumit, Hakoah Ramat Gan and Maccabi Haifa. Shimshon Tel Aviv were the only promoted club from Liga Alef to Liga Leumit. On same basis, promotion-relegation play-offs contested between the bottom Liga Alef clubs and the", "id": "14035798" }, { "contents": "Kobi Moyal\n\n\nKobi Moyal (; born June 12, 1987) is an Israeli footballer who plays for Hapoel Katamon. He played for Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Bnei Yehuda, Sheriff Tiraspol, Maccabi Haifa and American club New York Cosmos Moyal played in the youth system of Beitar Jerusalem until 2006. Moyal joined the senior team at 2006–07 season, and won the championship, while concurrently with the youth team won the double. Moyal was loaned to Hapoel Kfar Saba at 2007–08 season and on 2008–09 season to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. On", "id": "6810354" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Liga Alef\n\n\nthe time of the match, and was left unplayed at the end of the season. Liga Alef winner, Hakoah Tel Aviv face Liga Leumit 10th-placed club, Maccabi Jaffa. The matches took place on June 10 and 17, 1956. Maccabi Jaffa won 4–1 on aggregate and remained in Liga Leumit. Hakoah Tel Aviv remained in Liga Alef. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 9th and 10th placed teams in Liga Alef, Ahva Notzrit Haifa and Beitar Jerusalem, and the winners of the regional divisions of", "id": "11487386" }, { "contents": "Israeli Premier League\n\n\neight clubs to have competed since the inception of the Israeli Premier League in 1999, seven have won the title: Beitar Jerusalem (twice), Hapoel Be'er Sheva (thrice), Hapoel Tel Aviv (twice), Maccabi Haifa (seven times), Maccabi Tel Aviv (five times), and Ironi Kiryat Shmona (once). The current champions are Maccabi Tel Aviv, who won the 2018–19 season. The Israeli Premier League was created in 1999 to replace Liga Leumit (which became the second tier) when the", "id": "9345979" }, { "contents": "1955–56 in Israeli football\n\n\nJaffa, at the end of which, Hapoel Kfar Saba retained its place in the top division, joined by Maccabi Jaffa. The league started on 3 December 1955 and was played until 2 June 1956. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the title, while Maccabi Rehovot and Hapoel Kfar Saba finished bottom and relegated to 1956–57 Liga Alef. Maccabi Jaffa, who finished 10th, played a promotion/relegation play-offs against Hakoah Tel Aviv, and won both matches to stay in the top division. The 10th-placed Maccabi Jaffa faced", "id": "10084693" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\n. Hapoel Kfar Saba and HaKoach Rishon LeZion won promotion to Liga Bet, however, as club registration for the following season was low, all third division clubs that registered to play were placed in Liga Bet. Hapoel Tel Aviv, the defending cup holders were beaten by local rivals Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–4 in the semi-finals. In the final, Maccabi were beaten 1–3 by Beitar Tel Aviv. A five-team league was played in Jerusalem during spring 1940, with each team playing its opponents twice. Maccabi Bar Kochva", "id": "9189921" }, { "contents": "1954–55 Liga Gimel\n\n\nThe 1954–55 Liga Gimel season was the last in which Liga Gimel was the third tier of Israeli football, as the new Liga Leumit became the top division, Liga Alef became the second tier, and Liga Bet became the third tier. Hapoel Tirat HaCarmel, Hapoel Even Yehuda, Beitar Mahane Yehuda, Maccabi Shmuel Tel Aviv, Hapoel HaMegabesh Rishon LeZion and Hapoel Mefalsim won their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Bet, the new third tier, whilst Hapoel Tel Hanan, Maccabi Binyamina, Hapoel Bnei Brak\\Kiryat Ono, Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "13243981" }, { "contents": "1999–2000 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1999–2000 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Majd al-Krum (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Ashkelon (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to Liga Artzit. At the end of the season, Liga Artzit clubs, Beitar Tel Aviv and Shimshon Tel Aviv merged to form Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv, and Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon were also promoted. At the bottom, Maccabi Afula (from North division) and Hapoel Or Yehuda (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet,", "id": "11361525" }, { "contents": "2015–16 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2015–16 Israeli Premier League was the seventeenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 74th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2015 and ended in May 2016. Hapoel Be'er Sheva became champion after 40 years without winning a main national competition, interrupting the sequence of three consecutive titles of Maccabi Tel Aviv. A total of fourteen teams were competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2014–15 season and two promoted teams from the 2014–15 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva and F.C. Ashdod were", "id": "21350380" }, { "contents": "John Ogu\n\n\nBeitar Jerusalem at Vasermil Stadium and on 29 November scored his first goal in Hapoel Be'er Sheva in a 4–0 home win over Maccabi Netanya. In the first season of the team, and at the end of the season reached the finals of the Israel State Cup, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the 2015–16 season he competed with Hapoel Be'er Sheva in the UEFA Europa League qualifying and even scored a goal against FC Thun from the Swiss Super League, but the team was eliminated in both games. Later in the season he", "id": "19452047" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Toto Cup Al is the 34th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 13th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Beitar Jerusalem and Hapoel Haifa) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of the group", "id": "18532496" }, { "contents": "1993–94 Liga Artzit\n\n\nThe 1993–94 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Rishon LeZion, Hapoel Beit She'an (for the first time in their history) and Beitar Tel Aviv promoted to Liga Leumit. Shimshon Tel Aviv, who finished fourth, missed out on promotion after losing a play-off with top flight club Hapoel Haifa. At the other end of the table, Maccabi Acre and Hapoel Daliyat al-Karmel were automatically relegated to Liga Alef. 1. 12 points deducted 2. 14 points deducted 3. 5 points deducted 4th-placed Shimshon Tel Aviv", "id": "10573236" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Balfouria F.C.\n\n\nfinish last. They conceded 129 goals, still a league record, and twice lost by more than 10 goals (2–13 to Hapoel Petah Tikva and 0–12 at Maccabi Tel Aviv). At the end of the season they were relegated to Liga Alef, and in the following season, they suffered subsequent relegation to Liga Bet. in 1956–57 they won the North division of Liga Bet and made an immediate return to Liga Alef. Home matches of the club were played in Afula, as also, prior to their second season in", "id": "13629328" }, { "contents": "2019–20 Toto Cup Al\n\n\nThe 2019–20 Toto Cup Al is the 35th season of the third-important football tournament in Israel since its introduction and the 14th tournament involving Israeli Premier League clubs only. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions. The four clubs playing in the Champions League and Europa League (Maccabi Tel Aviv, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Be'er Sheva) will not take part in the group stage, while the remaining ten clubs were divided into two groups of five clubs. At the end of the group stage each of", "id": "15236327" }, { "contents": "Avi Ivgi\n\n\nAvi Ivgi (; born 2 October 1978) is an Israeli professional football goalkeeper who plays for Liga Alef club Hapoel Marmorek . He previously played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv, Hapoel Kfar Saba, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Hapoel Petah Tikva and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. Ivgi came through the Hapoel Nazareth Illit youth squad. He made his debut for the club's senior team in the 1996–97 season against Hapoel Majd al-Krum. In 2001 Ivgi moved to Bnei Yehuda and helped them gain promotion to the", "id": "20874811" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nseason won the Israel Football Association Cup after a second replay against Hapoel Haifa, which Maccabi won, 2–1. The following season Maccabi Tel Aviv repeated the feat by exactly the same score, this time in a dramatic extra time victory over Bnei Yehuda that included goals by midfielders Moshe Asis and Rafi Baranes. In the 1966–67 season Maccabi added a third IFA Cup. This time the opponent in the final were city rivals Hapoel Tel Aviv whom Maccabi defeated by the very same 2–1 score line, with goals from midfielder Uri Kedmi and", "id": "14103645" }, { "contents": "2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League\n\n\nThe 2018–19 Israeli Basketball Premier League, for sponsorship reasons Ligat Winner, is the 65th season of the Israeli Basketball Premier League. Maccabi Tel Aviv is the defending champion. Hapoel Be'er Sheva was promoted from the Liga Leumit, after they swept Maccabi Kiryat Gat 3–0 in the finals. Meanwhile, Maccabi Haifa was relegated after finishing in the last place the previous season. The first round of the playoffs is played in a best-of-five format, with the higher seeded team playing the first, third and fifth game at", "id": "18170978" }, { "contents": "1990–91 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1990–91 Liga Leumit season began on October 1990 and ended on June 1991, with Maccabi Haifa winning the title. The regular season had each team play twice against each opponent. The table was then divided into two, with top six teams entering the championship play-off and bottom six in the relegation play-off, where each team played the other teams in the play-off twice. Two teams from Liga Artzit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Tzafririm Holon and Hapoel Tel Aviv. The two", "id": "18840086" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nplayed on 28 October 1967. As in the previous round, resignations and forfeits meant that only 20 of the 32 scheduled matches were played. Also qualified from this round: Hapoel Bat Yam, Hapoel Kiryat Shmona, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Hapoel Ramla, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Yardena, Hapoel Ya'akov Kfar Saba, Maccabi Neve Sha'anan, Hapoel Sde Nahum, Beitar Dov Netanya, Hapoel Qalansawe, Shimshon Nahariya Liga Alef clubs entered the competition on this round. As in previous seasons, The draw was set so that Liga", "id": "15436113" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Netanya F.C. season\n\n\nbeginning of the 1955–56 league, the club participated in the Netanya 25th anniversary cup, along with Beitar Tel Aviv, Maccabi Petah Tikva and Hapoel Ramat Gan. In the competition, which was played as a round-robin tournament, the club finished third. During the season Maccabi Netanya played two international friendly matches, losing both matches. The league began on 6 February 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 20 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 6 rounds being played during September and October", "id": "14378669" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Alef\n\n\nwhich was Maccabi Jaffa. Matches were played initially during September, but Maccabi Rehovot, who had finished the season in the second place and had expected to be promoted, declined to participate and appealed the committee's decision. The results of Rehovot's matches were initially recorded as 0-3 technical losses. However, after their appeal was rejected, the club were allowed to replay their matches. Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem were promoted to Liga Leumit. Hapoel Hadera and Hakoah Tel Aviv were due to play a deciding match", "id": "11723397" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Hapoel Petah Tikva F.C. season\n\n\n, the club also competed in the State Cup, which was also carried over the summer break. The club eliminated Beitar Tel Aviv and Hapoel Ramat Gan to reach the cup final against Hapoel Petah Tikva. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the match 3–1 and won its 8th State Cup. During the season Hapoel Petah Tikva played two international friendly matches, drawing one and winning the other. In February 1956 the Israeli government lifted the ban on hosting teams from Austria and Hapoel and Maccabi Petah Tikva invited Kapfenberger SV to a tour of Israel", "id": "15441156" }, { "contents": "1973–74 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1973–74 Liga Leumit season saw Maccabi Netanya win their second title. Benny Alon of Hapoel Haifa was the league's top scorer with 15 goals. The bottom two clubs, Hakoah Ramat Gan (who had won the title the previous season) and Maccabi Haifa took part in a play-off group with the top four clubs from Liga Alef to decide promotion and relegation. The top two clubs would remain in/be promoted to Liga Leumit, whilst the bottom four would start the 1974–75 season in Liga Alef. At the", "id": "20100705" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nto stay in the Liga Leumit, while Be'er Sheva wanted to win to secure the championship Beitar Jerusalem met Maccabi Tel Aviv, which also fought against the decline, and had to win. Maccabi Jaffa won 1–0, but after the defeat of Beitar Jerusalem, Be'er Sheva won a second consecutive championship. Shalom Avitan, who returned to the team at the beginning of the season, finished him as the team's top scorer with 11 conquests. In the summer of 1976 Be'er Sheva and Beitar Jerusalem were the first teams in the", "id": "9346549" }, { "contents": "Ben Azubel\n\n\nBen Azubel (; born 19 September 1993) is an Israeli professional footballer who plays for Israeli Premier League side Hapoel Haifa. Azubel started his football career with the youth teams of Maccabi Petah Tikva, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Kfar Saba. On 19 September 2011 Azubel played the first game in Toto Cup with Hapoel Kfar Saba football team. On summer 2017 Azubel signed with Hapoel Acre. On 10 September 2017 He scored the first goal in the Israeli Premier League and he ending the season with 8 goals. On", "id": "1139686" }, { "contents": "2016 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nhad previously played in 15 finals, winning 5. Their most recent appearance in the final was the previous year's edition, in which they lost 2–1 to Hapoel Tel Aviv, and their most recent victory in the tournament was in 1998, beating Hapoel Jerusalem 2–0. Maccabi Tel Aviv and Maccabi Haifa had played each other in four previous finals of the tournament. Maccabi Tel Aviv won in 2002 and 1987,and Maccabi Haifa won in 1962 and 1993. The two teams played each other four during the 2015–16 Israeli Premier League season.", "id": "13325174" }, { "contents": "Israel Super Cup\n\n\nan IFA sanctioned competition, the competition was played annually, except for 1972, 1973 and 1987 until its cancellation in 1990. Between 1969 and 1971 The IFA also sanctioned a \"Champion of Champions\" match for Liga Alef, which was played between the two regional winners of Liga Alef. The match was played once more, at the end of the 1975–76 season, and was discontinued after the establishment of Liga Artzit. The most successful clubs were Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Tel Aviv with 5 titles each.", "id": "3318259" }, { "contents": "2013–14 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2013–14 Liga Leumit was the fifteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Israel. It began on 8 September 2013 and will end in May 2014. A total of sixteen teams are contesting in the league, including twelve sides from the 2012–13 season, two promoted team from the 2012–13 Liga Alef and two relegated teams from the 2012–13 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Petah Tikva, and Hapoel Ra'anana, were promoted to the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Netanya, and Hapoel Ramat Gan", "id": "10314828" }, { "contents": "2008–09 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2008–09 Israeli Premier League season began on 30 August 2008, and ended on 1 June 2009. Beitar Jerusalem were the defending champions, having won their 6th league title the previous year. Two teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hakoah Amidar Ramat Gan and Hapoel Petah Tikva. The two teams relegated were Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Herzliya. At a 24 June 2008 IFA administration meeting it was decided that the league would be expanded to 16 clubs for the following season. Due to the", "id": "13389521" }, { "contents": "2000–01 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 2000–01 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Maccabi Kiryat Gat promoted to the Israeli Premier League, the latter for the first time in their history. Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata and Hapoel Jerusalem were relegated to Liga Artzit. Abed Titi of Maccabi Ahi Nazareth was the league's top scorer with 22 goals. Following the first three rounds (33 games), the table was split into two, with teams from the \"Upper group\" and \"Lower group\" playing each other once more to make a total of 38", "id": "11412905" }, { "contents": "1958–59 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 1958–59 Liga Alef season saw Bnei Yehuda win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. A promotion-relegation play-off between the 11th and 12th placed clubs in Liga Alef, Maccabi Sha'arayim and Hapoel Afula, and the second placed clubs of the regional divisions of Liga Bet, Hapoel Netanya and Hapoel Be'er Sheva. Each club played the other three once. Shortly after the Relegation play-offs, Hapoel Afula was disqualified for fielding Zvi Singel, who was also listed at the Israeli football association as a player of lower", "id": "15758422" }, { "contents": "1967–68 Israel State Cup\n\n\nTel Mond, Hapoel Zikhron Ya'akov, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Beit Eliezer, Hapoel Hod HaSharon, Hapoel Shefayim, Beitar Kiryat Shmona, M.S. Even Yehuda, Hapoel Ahva Haifa, Hapoel HaTzafon Tel Aviv, Hapoel Ganei Tikva, Hapoel Rehovot, Hapoel Qalansawe, Beitar Ganei Tikva, Maccabi Yavne, Hapoel Sde Uziyah, Maccabi HaSharon Netanya, Hapoel Beit Shemesh, Beitar Jaffa, Beitar Beit Shemesh, Maccabi Ramat HaShikma, Maccabi Rehovot, Hapoel Ofakim, Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, Hapoel Mitzpe Ramon, Beitar Holon, Shimshon Ashkelon. Matches were", "id": "15436112" }, { "contents": "1956–57 Liga Leumit\n\n\nThe 1956–57 Liga Leumit season lasted from December 1956 until April 1957. Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title, the club's first championship since independence in 1949. No clubs were relegated as the league was expanded from ten to twelve clubs for the following season. The top five clubs from Liga Alef entered the promotion play-offs, resulting in Hapoel Kfar Saba and Hapoel Jerusalem being promoted. Due to irregularities during the 1956–57 Liga Alef season, an IFA committee decided to hold a promotion play-off between the top five clubs", "id": "18640676" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2014–15 Israeli Premier League is the sixteenth season since its introduction in 1999 and the 73nd season of top-tier football in Israel. It began in the end of August 2014 and will end in May 2015. Maccabi Tel Aviv are the defending champions, having won their third Premier League title, and 20th championship last season. A total of fourteen teams are competing in the league, including twelve sides from the 2013–14 season and two promoted team from the 2013–14 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nir Ramat HaSharon and Bnei Yehuda were relegated", "id": "18446765" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\ntable on the last day of the season only to disappointingly lose their final match to Hapoel Haifa thereby handing the championship to Hapoel Petah Tikva. The outstanding player of Maccabi's season had been Rafi Levi, one of the greatest strikers in the club's history, who was the league's leading goal scorer with 19 goals. A year later the Brazilian club Santos visited Israel, along with their legendary player, Pelé, for a friendly match against a side composed of the best players from both Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah", "id": "14103643" }, { "contents": "Boni Ginzburg\n\n\ntwo seasons in Glasgow playing second-fiddle to England's Chris Woods, Ginzburg returned home, representing successively Maccabi Yavne FC, Beitar Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Ironi Ashdod FC, Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv FC, Maccabi Haifa FC, Hapoel Ashkelon F.C. and Hapoel Kfar Saba FC, and retiring at nearly 37. Ginzburg made his debut for Israel 10 June 1984 in a friendly with Wales keeping a clean sheet as the game ended 0–0. His last match was in another exhibition game, this time against Romania on 14 August 1996", "id": "17466781" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Liga Alef\n\n\nThe 2012–13 Liga Alef season saw Hapoel Afula (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Katamon (champions of the South Division) win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit. Beitar Kfar Saba won the promotion play-offs and met Beitar Tel Aviv Ramla of Liga Leumit and lost 2–4 on aggregate and thus remained in Liga Alef. At the bottom, the bottom two clubs in each division, Hapoel Kafr Kanna, Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot-Tarshiha (from North division), Maccabi Ironi Kfar Yona and Ortodoxim Lod were all", "id": "17401705" }, { "contents": "Basketball in Israel\n\n\nJerusalem, Hapoel Tel Aviv, Maccabi Ashdod, Maccabi Haifa, Maccabi Rishon LeZion, Maccabi Tel Aviv, and Maccabi Kiryat Gat Liga Leumit is the second tier level league of basketball competition. The league contains 14 clubs that compete in a home-and-away round-robin. At the end of the season, the top eight clubs advance to the play-offs. The first round is played on a best-of-three basis. The four winning clubs advance to two best-of-five playoffs,", "id": "12760829" }, { "contents": "1961–62 Israel State Cup\n\n\nItzhak Ben-Zvi, at the Hebrew University Stadium. The date was set to 7 May 1962 and Maccabi Haifa won 5–2 to win its first cup. Matches were played on 29 April 1961. Byes: Hakoah Tel Aviv, Hapoel Mahane Yehuda, Hapoel Tiberias. Liga Leumit teams entered the competition at this round. Matches were played on 20 May 1961. The match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tel Aviv was played on 17 May 1961. Resuming the competition after the summer break and Israel's matches against Italy, most", "id": "3301529" }, { "contents": "1955–56 Maccabi Jaffa F.C. season\n\n\nexistence, to the top division. At the end of the season, the club placed 10th (out of 12) in the league, which meant the club had to face promotion/relegation play-offs against the first placed team from Liga Alef, Hakoah Tel Aviv. Maccabi Jaffa won both play-off matches and stayed in Liga Leumit. The league began on 8 January 1955, and by the time the previous season ended, only 18 rounds of matches were completed, with the final 4 rounds being played during", "id": "8132640" }, { "contents": "Shay Holtzman\n\n\nShay Holtsman (, born January 1, 1974) is a retired Israeli footballer. He played as a striker in the top level of Israeli league football for Maccabi Netanya, Maccabi Haifa, Tzafririm Holon, Hapoel Be'er Sheva, Beitar Jerusalem, Hapoel Haifa, Maccabi Petah Tikva, Ironi Rishon leZion, F.C. Ashdod and for the Israel national team. He also played for Austrian club Austria Wien for one season. He is both F.C. Ashdod's and the Israeli Premier League's record goalscorer. After retiring as a player, Holtzman", "id": "13764058" }, { "contents": "Dudu Biton\n\n\nDudu Biton (; born 1 March 1988) is an Israeli footballer who plays as a striker for Hapoel Haifa. Biton played in the youth clubs of Beitar Nes Tubruk and Maccabi Haifa. He made his debut for Maccabi Haifa in Ligat ha'Al on 12 May 2006 in the last league fixture against Bnei Sakhnin, becoming a league champion. This was his only appearance for the senior team and during 2006–07 season he returned to Beitar Nes Tubruk. Later he played for Maccabi Tel Aviv for one season before signing in Hapoel Ra'anana from Liga", "id": "9328659" }, { "contents": "1957–58 Israel State Cup\n\n\nThe 1957–58 Israel State Cup (, \"Gvia HaMedina\") was the 20th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the fifth after the Israeli Declaration of Independence. Early round matches, with Liga Gimel and Liga Bet teams began on 12 October 1957. Liga Leumit clubs joined the competition in late June 1958. a quarter-final match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Hapoel Petah Tikva ended prematurely, and the IFA ruled the match in favor of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Hapoel Petah Tikva appealed the decision, and the process", "id": "341288" }, { "contents": "2014–15 Liga Leumit\n\n\nLeumit after finishing the 2013–14 Israeli Premier League season in the bottom two places. Hapoel Ashkelon, and Maccabi Umm al-Fahm were directly relegated to Liga Alef after finishing in the previous season in last two league places. They were replaced by Hapoel Kfar Saba and Maccabi Kiryat Gat who finished first their respective 2013–14 Liga Alef Liga Alef. Ironi Tiberias won the Liga Alef playoffs, and after relegation play-offs replaced Hapoel Katamon Jerusalem in Liga Leumit. Key numbers for pairing determination (number marks position after 30 games):", "id": "2480800" }, { "contents": "2017 Israel State Cup Final\n\n\nThe 2017 Israel State Cup Final decided the winner of the 2016–17 Israel State Cup, the 81th season of Israel's main football cup. It will be played on 25 May 2017 at the Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv. Maccabi Tel Aviv had previously played 35 Israel cup Finals, had won the competition a record 23 times. Their most recent appearance in the final was two years ago, in which they won 6–2 to Hapoel Beer Sheva at Sammy Ofer in Haifa. and their", "id": "1507323" }, { "contents": "1939–40 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nThe 1939–40 season was the 13th season of competitive football in the British Mandate for Palestine under the Eretz Israel Football Association. Matches of the 1939 Palestine League, which, due to the Arab Revolt, was split into regional leagues, rather than holding a national championship, were carried from the previous season , and were finished in fall 1939. Maccabi Tel Aviv and British Police won the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem divisions of top tier Liga Alef, while Hapoel Hadera, Beitar Tel Aviv and Maccabi Rehovot won their Liga Bet regional divisions", "id": "9189918" }, { "contents": "Shimshon Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\nplayer Moshe Romano was the division's joint top scorer alongside Maccabi Netanya's prolific striker Mordechai Spiegler, with 17 goals. The club also made their first appearance in a State Cup final, going down 2–1 to Hapoel Haifa. Another 4th-place finish was achieved in 1969–70, with Romano again finishing as the league's top scorer. The following season they went one better by finishing second to champions Maccabi Netanya. However, the success was not sustained, and a season after finishing second, the club narrowly avoided relegation,", "id": "21185463" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nThe 2009–10 Israeli Premier League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1999 and the 68th season of top-tier football in Israel. It began on 22 August 2009 and ended on 15 May 2010 with the last matches of the playoff round. On 15 May 2010, Hapoel Tel Aviv won the title in the last play-off round after Maccabi Haifa failed to win against Bnei Yehuda and they won their game against Beitar Jerusalem in a late goal at the 90+2' minute of extra time. The league size", "id": "4265401" }, { "contents": "2009–10 Liga Leumit\n\n\n, Ahva Arraba with 22, Hapoel Rishon LeZion with 20 and Maccabi Herzliya started with 20. The points obtained during the regular season were halved (and rounded up) before the start of the playoff. Thus, Hapoel Bnei Lod started with 20 points, Hakoah Ramat Gan with 19, Maccabi Be'er Sheva with 18, Beitar Shimshon Tel Aviv with 17, Hapoel Jerusalem with 12 and Hapoel Marmorek started with 7. The 3rd-placed team Hapoel Kfar Saba faced the 14th-placed Israeli Premier League team Hapoel Ramat Gan.", "id": "4265464" }, { "contents": "Rafi Dahan\n\n\nRafael Dahan (born 28 September 1989), also known as Rafi Dahan, is a former Israeli footballer who last played for Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv as a defensive midfielder. Dahan grew up in the Beitar Nes Tubruk youth academy. In 2009, Hapoel Petah Tikva signed Dahan and by his second season with the club, Dahan had established himself as a first team player. In 2011, he signed with Maccabi Tel Aviv. In March 2014, Maccabi Haifa F.C.'s Rubén Rayos committed a brutal tackle which resulted in an anterior", "id": "8462695" }, { "contents": "1939 Palestine League\n\n\nThe 1939 Palestine League was the seventh season of league football in the British Mandate for Palestine. Due to the Arab Revolt the league was split into regional leagues in Tel Aviv (two tiers), Samaria and South districts, while in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias leagues were played, managed by the British Army. Maccabi Tel Aviv won the Tel Aviv regional league on goal average, while Beitar Netanya and Maccabi Rehovot won the Samaria and Southern divisions. Neither of the winner teams is listed as champions in the Israel Football Association", "id": "5025080" }, { "contents": "2012–13 Israeli Premier League\n\n\nHaifa with four more rounds to go. There were three structural changes: A total of fourteen teams competed in the league, including thirteen sides from the 2011–12 season and one promoted team from the 2011–12 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Petah Tikva, Hapoel Rishon LeZion, and Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated to the 2012–13 Liga Leumit after finishing the 2011–12 season in the bottom three places. Maccabi Petah Tikva were relegated after 21 straight seasons, Hapoel Petah Tikva after four years consecutively and Hapoel Rishon LeZion after just one year on the top division", "id": "17389485" }, { "contents": "Eyal Lahman\n\n\n. He was given his first full managerial position by Hapoel Mahane Yehuda in 1991. In 1993, he became Beitar Petah Tikva manager, before moving the Hapoel Givat Olga the following year. In 1995, he was appointed manager of Ironi Rishon LeZion, leading the club to the State Cup final in 1996, though they lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv. In 1998, he moved on to Maccabi Petah Tikva, before joining Hapoel Kfar Saba the following season. After six matches of the 1999-2000 season he left the club", "id": "1643699" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nhave a clean sheet for 783 minutes (9 games) from 8/12/07 to 16/2/08, which is a record in the history of Israeli football. After three seasons in Maccabi Netanya he made his return to Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was Maccabi Tel Aviv's team captain. After a poor form in the last season of Maccabi Tel Aviv He left the club as a free agent and signed for Maccabi Petah Tikva. He retired from football after getting relegated with Maccabi Petah Tikva to Liga Leumit. Strauber made 513 appearances in the Israeli", "id": "20413848" }, { "contents": "Liran Strauber\n\n\nmoving to Hapoel Kiryat Ono for one season too. At the next season Strauber was playing in Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv where he stayed for one year. During playing in those three clubs Strauber was also the goalkeeper of the Israel national under-21 football team and had 17 international caps. At the 1995/96 season Strauber was a player of Maccabi Ironi Ashdod before returning to Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv for another season. The next season, he moved to Hapoel Jerusalem and played there for two seasons. After two seasons in Jerusalem Strauber moved to", "id": "20413846" }, { "contents": "1963–64 Liga Bet\n\n\nThe 1963–64 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Safed, Hapoel Netanya, Beitar Lod and Hapoel Ashkelon win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef. Second placed clubs, Beitar Haifa, Hapoel Ra'anana, Beitar Harari Tel Aviv and Maccabi Holon were also promoted, as Liga Alef expanded to 16 clubs in each division. also, as there was an odd number of clubs for next season Liga Alef (15 teams competed in Liga Leumit), another promotion spot given to the best third placed club (rather than promotion playoffs),", "id": "12737381" }, { "contents": "Ran Ben Shimon\n\n\nhad 34 appearances in the Israeli national football team. Ben Shimon also play in Hapoel Petah Tikva in the 2001–02 season and in Bnei Yehuda in the 2002–03 season before retired from active football. After retiring from playing, he started coaching the youth team of Maccabi Tel Aviv and then as a manager at Hapoel Haifa. Ben Shimon did not continue after he failed in his efforts to promote the team to the Israeli Premier League. During 2006–07 season, he coached Ironi Kiryat Shmona and promote her from Liga Leumit to the Israeli Premier", "id": "409021" }, { "contents": "List of Israel State Cup winners\n\n\nin 1978, but they were unable to overcome league champions Maccabi Netanya, who lifted the cup for the first time with this victory. Three more teams won their first cup titles during the 1970s: Hapoel Kfar Saba, and Beitar and Hapoel Jerusalem. Two small-town clubs, Hapoel Yehud and Hapoel Lod, won the cup for the first time in 1982 and 1984 respectively, but otherwise the 1980s cup finals were the domain of sides from the cities of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Maccabi Haifa won four cup finals during", "id": "10315943" }, { "contents": "1928–29 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nthe cup. previous season's finalist (and joint-winner), Maccabi Hasmonean Jerusalem made it to the final for a second year in a row, but was beaten by Maccabi Tel Aviv 4–0. This cup was contested by six teams, playing in a double round-robin league format. Three of the teams, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Hapoel Tel Aviv and Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva were Jewish teams, and three, RAF Ramla, Wireless Sarafand and PGH Sarafand, were British military teams. The competition was won by", "id": "8442818" }, { "contents": "1938–39 in Mandatory Palestine football\n\n\nbegan, with teams playing in regionalized divisions instead a national league. Shortly after the previous league season was abandoned, a new season was initiated. With the Arab Revolt still raging, the league played regionally, split into Tel Aviv, Samaria and Southern regional leagues League matches were not completed by the end of the season and continued after the summer break. Hapoel Tel Aviv, defeating Maccabi Avshalom Petah Tikva 2–1 in the final, completed a third consecutive cup triumph. British Army authorities organized leagues in Jerusalem, Haifa and Tiberias", "id": "6254850" }, { "contents": "Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.\n\n\na Maccabi Tel Aviv side bolstered by three of the Israeli Premier League's brightest stars of the time: Maccabi Netanya strikers Mordechai \"Motaleh\" Spiegler and Oded Machnes and Beitar Jerusalem midfielder Uri Malmilian. Maccabi won the match, 2–1, with goals from Malmilian and Spiegler. A year later and once again Maccabi Tel Aviv went from near disaster to the league summit, securing in the 1976/77 season their second double of the decade. They won the title three points ahead of Maccabi Jaffa and with 47 goals, the highest number", "id": "14103652" }, { "contents": "Hapoel Be'er Sheva F.C.\n\n\nAviv won 3–1 and was eliminated after a loss 3–0 to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semi-finals. In the 1963–64 season, the league was divided into two districts – North and South, and Be'er Sheva finished as the \"winter champion\" in the Liga Alef South. Be'er Sheva struggled with Beitar Tel Aviv to advance to the national league in the Southern District, and at the end of the season Beitar Tel Aviv finished first with a better goal differential. In the 1964–65 season, under the guidance of Yugoslav coach", "id": "9346536" } ]
Hagop Sandaldjian ( 1931 -- 1990 ) was an Egyptian-born [START_ENT] Armenian American [END_ENT] musician and microminiature sculptor , best known for his tiny art pieces displayed at the Museum of Jurassic Technology in . Sandaldjian 's creations included a carving of Mount Ararat on a grain of rice ; a crucifix in which a minute golden figure of Jesus hangs upon a cross made from a bisected strand of Sandaldjian 's own hair ; and recreations of Disney figures ( Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs or Mickey Mouse , for example ) or historical figures ( such as Napoleon or Pope John Paul II ) presented in the eye or on the tip of a needle . Sandaldjian was born in Alexandria , Egypt , and went to the Soviet Union to study music in Yerevan , Armenia and in Moscow . He became a violinist , and taught music at a conservatory in Yerevan . In the early 1970s he learned about the art of microminiature from one of his students , Eduard Ghazaryan . Sandaldjian emigrated to the United States in 1980 , but was required to leave behind his first collection of 18 miniature works . Over the next decade , he produced another 33 miniatures . Working extremely slowly under a microscope , Sandaldjian employed self-made tools such as sharpened needles tipped with ruby or diamond dust , compiling his sculptures out of minuscule materials such as dust , lint , and hair . Even among the few practitioners of microminiature art , Sandaldjian was unusual in that he painted his work , using a single sharpened strand of hair as a brush . Sandaldjian would time his motions to come between his heartbeats , thus maximizing his control of his fingers . Those who saw Sandaldjian at work said that they could not tell when his hands moved . As recounted in Lawrence Weschler 's book Mr. Wilson 's Cabinet of Wonder , Museum of Jurassic Technology founder David Hildebrand Wilson learned about Sandaldjian from a museum visitor , and began visiting him at his home in Montebello , California
b5c3d02b-0868-4a95-85f0-582106617364_Hagop_Sandaldjia:0
[{"answer": "Armenian Americans", "provenance": [{"wikipedia_id": "4277629", "title": "Armenian Americans"}]}]
[ { "contents": "Hagop Sandaldjian\n\n\n, but was required to leave behind his first collection of 18 miniature works. Over the next decade, he produced another 33 miniatures. Working extremely slowly under a microscope, Sandaldjian employed self-made tools such as sharpened needles tipped with ruby or diamond dust, compiling his sculptures out of minuscule materials such as dust, lint, and hair. Even among the few practitioners of microminiature art, Sandaldjian was unusual in that he painted his work, using a single sharpened strand of hair as a brush. Sandaldjian would time his", "id": "17333960" }, { "contents": "Hagop Sandaldjian\n\n\nHagop Sandaldjian (1931–1990) was an Egyptian-born Armenian American musician and microminiature sculptor, best known for his tiny art pieces displayed at the Museum of Jurassic Technology in Los Angeles, California. Sandaldjian's creations included a carving of Mount Ararat on a grain of rice; a crucifix in which a minute golden figure of Jesus hangs upon a cross made from a bisected strand of Sandaldjian's own hair; and recreations of Disney figures (Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs or Mickey Mouse, for example) or historical figures (", "id": "17333958" }, { "contents": "Hagop Sandaldjian\n\n\nsuch as Napoleon or Pope John Paul II) presented in the eye or on the tip of a needle. Sandaldjian was born in Alexandria, Egypt, and went to the Soviet Union to study music in Yerevan, Armenia and in Moscow. After graduating from the Ippolitov-Ivanov Music College in 1955, he became a violinist, and taught music at a conservatory in Yerevan. In the early 1970s he learned about the art of microminiature from one of his students, Eduard Ghazaryan. Sandaldjian emigrated to the United States in 1980", "id": "17333959" }, { "contents": "Hagop Sandaldjian\n\n\nmotions to come between his heartbeats, thus maximizing his control of his fingers. Those who saw Sandaldjian at work said that they could not tell when his hands moved. As recounted in Lawrence Weschler's book \"Mr. Wilson's Cabinet of Wonder\", Museum of Jurassic Technology founder David Hildebrand Wilson learned about Sandaldjian from a museum visitor, and began visiting him at his home in Montebello, California. Wilson, who described the artist as \"a very calm man\", eventually decided to give Sandaldjian a show at the museum", "id": "17333961" }, { "contents": "Mr. Wilson's Cabinet of Wonder\n\n\nMr. Wilson's Cabinet of Wonder: Pronged Ants, Horned Humans, Mice on Toast, and Other Marvels of Jurassic Technology is a book by Lawrence Weschler primarily about the Museum of Jurassic Technology and, more broadly, the history and role of museums. The book is divided into two sections, called \"Inhaling the Spore\" and \"Cerebral Growth\". \"Inhaling the Spore\" focuses on the Museum of Jurassic Technology itself. The author relates his experiences with the museum and its creator, the titular David Hildebrand Wilson.", "id": "8176220" }, { "contents": "David Hildebrand Wilson\n\n\nDavid Hildebrand Wilson is the co-founder, along with his wife, Diana Wilson, of the enigmatic Museum of Jurassic Technology in Los Angeles, California. After high school, Wilson enrolled at Kalamazoo College where he majored in urban entomology with a minor in art. He received an MFA in Experimental Animation from the California Institute of the Arts in 1976. He was awarded the MacArthur Fellowship and the Creative Capital Moving Image Award in 2001. He and his museum are the subject of the book, \"Mr. Wilson's Cabinet", "id": "9450436" }, { "contents": "Museum of Jurassic Technology\n\n\n's book, \"Mr. Wilson's Cabinet of Wonder: Pronged Ants, Horned Humans, Mice on Toast, And Other Marvels of Jurassic Technology\", attempts to explain the mystery of the Museum of Jurassic Technology. Weschler deeply explores the museum through conversations with its founder, David Wilson, and through outside research on several exhibitions. His investigations into the history of certain exhibits led to varying results of authenticity; some exhibits seem to have been created by Wilson's imagination while other exhibits might be suitable for display in a natural", "id": "334924" }, { "contents": "Robert David Brady\n\n\nRobert Brady (1946–present) is an American modernist sculptor who works in ceramics and wood. Born in Reno, Nevada, he has made his home in the San Francisco Bay Area for many decades now. Brady is a multi-faceted artist who additionally works in pottery, painting, and illustration, though he is best known for his abstract figurative sculptures. Brady came out of the California Clay movement, and the Bay Area Arts scene of the 1950s and 60's, which includes artists such as Peter Voulkos, Viola Frey", "id": "21176331" }, { "contents": "Hagop Ishkanian\n\n\nHagop Ishkanian (, born 27 July 1938) is a contemporary Armenian and American sculptor. Hagop Ishkanian was born on 27 July 1938 in Cairo, Egypt. In 1948 he emigrated with his family to Soviet Armenia. In 1964 he graduated from the Yerevan State Institute of Creative Art and Theatre (now known as the Yerevan State Academy of Art). That same year he participated in exhibitions organised by the state and the Armenian Union of Artists. In 1968 he joined the Armenian Union of Painters. Until 1977 he was a", "id": "9231841" }, { "contents": "Ray Yoshida\n\n\nto build his personal collection of objects and images by self-taught and folk artists, installing these at his home. In the early 1970s, he created works which often featured abstracted objects; his work from the mid-1970s to 1980s incorporated a stronger figural sense. Yoshida returned to comic collage pieces in the 1990s and early 2000s, and produced a series of oil paintings in his late years. \"Scamper\", in the collection of the Honolulu Museum of Art, is an example of the artist's comic collage paintings.", "id": "7079621" }, { "contents": "Areg Elibekyan\n\n\nAreg Elibekyan (; born June 29, 1970) is an Armenian painter. Areg Elibekyan was born in Yerevan, Armenia, the son of Robert Elibekyan. From 1987 to 1992, he studied at the Yerevan Arts and Theatre Institute, but has lived in Montreal since 1992. His work has been exhibited in Armenia, France, Lebanon, Canada, and the United States and displayed at the Modern Art Museum of Yerevan, Alex & Marie Manoogian Museum of Detroit, and the Arame Art Gallery, Yerevan, Armenia. Since 2009", "id": "9961170" }, { "contents": "Karapet Yeghiazaryan\n\n\nKarapet Yeghiazaryan (; March 7, 1932 in Yerevan – 2006 in Yerevan) was an Armenian painter, Honored Artist of Armenia, 1983. Karapet Yeghiazaryuan was born in 1932 in Yerevan. The artistic depth of his nature was revealed in his childhood in his love towards nature, his perception of the beauty of its views and colors. He attended the painting group of the Ghoukassian Haouse of Pioneers (teacher Gagik Ghazaryan). Karapet Yeghiazaryan's works are exhibited in art galleries, museum, well-known cultural centers and private collections", "id": "5604020" }, { "contents": "George S. Stuart\n\n\nperforming arts. He began traveling the United States delivering historical monologues about politically influential people from world history in combination with displays of his historical sculptures. When Stuart moved to Ojai, California in 1959, he opened The Gallery of Historical Figures and began teaching workshops on figural construction, costuming and sculpting faces. In 1991, the city of Ojai presented Stuart with its Lifetime Achievement in the Arts award. He also has been recognized by the United States Congress. Stuart's Historical Figures are on permanent exhibit at the Museum of Ventura", "id": "18265817" }, { "contents": "Adil Akhtar\n\n\nart museums in nearby Washington, D.C. Those visits to the museums inspired him and had aroused the hidden artist in him. Thus he decided to become a self-taught painter-artist. In 2017, he works as a physician in Michigan. But Akhtar has a large area set aside as his painting studio, in his basement, at home. As painting tools, he uses brushes, pencils, charcoals, crayons and even his index finger. He sometimes even uses his palms and feet. It's quite an experience", "id": "18143133" }, { "contents": "Dennis Hare\n\n\nin oils. \"Hare's early figurative work catapulted him to success in the 1980s\". Hare is a self-taught artist, having visited museums and studied the work of classic talents to develop his own skill. Hare works mainly in oil but uses a variety of material in his pieces, especially discarded items, junk and especially objects that shows signs of weathering. Hare's art work is on display at his home studio. His pieces have appeared in private galleries such as the Westbrook Galleries, Art Cube, the", "id": "21512073" }, { "contents": "Marcos Grigorian\n\n\nwhich was then still a republic of the Soviet Union). In 1989, he traveled to Russia at the invitation of the Union of Russian Artists, visiting Moscow and Leningrad. He exhibited his clay and straw works in Yerevan in 1991. He later donated 5,000 of his artworks to the government of Armenia. In 1993 he founded the \"Museum of the Middle East\" in Yerevan: 2,600 exhibits are on display, with most of them coming from his own collection. Some of his works are now on display at the", "id": "6586341" }, { "contents": "Suren Nazaryan\n\n\nUnion of Artists of the USSR. Early works of his career are mainly figurative realistic compositions. One of the most important of his early works is a multi-figure composition called \"Political Prisoners\". In 1959, it was chosen for the permanent exposition at Yerevan’s State History Museum of Armenia. Another work that deserves notice is a single-figure composition called In the Beginning of the Era, 1962. These creations developed Nazaryan’s name as an artist. From 1957 to 1973, he taught sculpting at the Terlemezyan", "id": "1263340" }, { "contents": "Aleksey Lidov\n\n\nsubjects. During his studies at the University of Moscow Lidov specialized in the Byzantine art history. While working as a researcher at the State Museum of Oriental Art, he studied the Christian art of Armenia and Georgia. Building upon the material of his PhD thesis, he published in 1991 his first book about the mural paintings of the Akhtala monastery in Armenia. In this book he characterized the art of chalcedonian Armenians as a separate iconographic tradition, which combined Byzantine, Georgian and Armenian elements. Drawing upon the seminal works of A.", "id": "6883206" }, { "contents": "Sipan Shiraz\n\n\nSipan Shiraz () (1967, Yerevan – June 25, 1997, Yerevan) was an Armenian poet, sculptor and painter. He was the son of Armenian poet Hovhannes Shiraz and his second wife, Shushanik. He studied at Yerevan Art Institute. Shiraz was an author of poetry books and memoirs about his father. A member of the Writers Union of Armenia, he also worked at Yerevan radio. According to poet Artashes Ghazaryan, \"Sipan lived as a meteor\". During his short life he published 7 books of", "id": "7275895" }, { "contents": "Pete Najarian (writer)\n\n\nArts in 2000. His works were cited during a discussion of Armenian American literature at a symposium celebrating the 40th anniversary of the Society for Armenian Studies. Najarian is also a plein air painter and a sculptor, and his work has been exhibited in the Artist’s Union in Yerevan, Armenia; in the Hearst Gallery at Saint Mary’s College of California; in the Napa Valley Museum in California; and at Berkeley Public Library. His last four books are illustrated with his drawings and paintings. \"The Paintings of Art Pinajian", "id": "8293852" }, { "contents": "Robert W. Olszewski\n\n\nfigurines and displays. Traveling on behalf of Goebel gave Olszewski the opportunity to visit art museums in order to learn from the best artists of the world. Olszewski notes that in the past 40 years, he has studied art displayed in over 40 museums . He noted the different types of \"miniature\" art, rarely described as such, in jewelry, prayer book illuminations, scrimshaw, buttons, netsuke carvings, and portraits. A list of those museums he visited can be found in a Disney interview. Olszewski states that his", "id": "1492613" }, { "contents": "Oliver Gagliani\n\n\nOliver Gagliani ( 1917 – 2002) was an American photographer, a master of large format photography, darkroom technique, and the Zone System. Upon seeing a retrospective of Paul Strand's work in 1945 at the San Francisco Museum of Art, he was convinced that photography could be considered fine art. Mostly self-taught, he is best known for his beautiful and haunting black-and-white photographs of ghost towns of the southwest. Born in Placerville, California, Oliver studied under and worked with some of the greatest", "id": "12987648" }, { "contents": "Alexandr Zhdanov\n\n\nof his pieces hang in a collection of Soviet dissident art at the Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum at Rutgers University. Some of Mr. Zhdanov's work was purely abstract, and he painted rugged, de Kooning-like portraits. But he was best known for his brooding nocturnal landscapes, which featured the moon, leafless trees and mysterious figures lurking in the gloom. He said the figures represented Pan, the mischievous Greek god of the wild, but some observers saw them as veiled images of himself. On the open market,", "id": "22078296" }, { "contents": "John Frame (sculptor)\n\n\n,and hagiography). Critics have noted other diverse echoes and influences in Frame's work, including 19th century allegorical statuary, Black Forest Carvings, aboriginal fetish figures romanesque and gothic effigies, American Arts and Crafts, and cubism His work has been noted to have commonalities with that of Joseph Cornell, H.C. Westermann, Michael McMillen, and Stephen DeStaebler His sculptural output increased between 1984 and 1990. In the mid-90's, he began to incorporate found objects into his pieces, a practice he has continued into the present. Thus", "id": "7542046" }, { "contents": "Gostan Zarian\n\n\ncookery and writing talk, Such food, such wine—a wonder we can walk. /poem While teaching at UC Berkeley, Zarian was visited by the Catholicos of All Armenians Vazgen I, who asked him to return to Armenia after many years of exile. In 1963 Zarian once more returned to Soviet Armenia where he worked at the Charents Museum of Literature and Arts in Yerevan. He died in Yerevan on December 11, 1969, leaving behind three children from his first marriage, Vahe, Armen, and Nevart Zarian, and", "id": "20057338" }, { "contents": "Ahmed Morsi\n\n\nAhmed Morsi (born 1930, Alexandria) is an artist, art critic and poet with a career that spans seven decades of creative output. In the 1950s, he simultaneously studied literature at Alexandria University and painting at the studio of Silvio Becchi, the son of Italian master Otorino Becchi. In 1974, Morsi moved to New York City, where he continues to paint, write and critique from his Manhattan home. His work is in public collections including the Egyptian Museum of Modern Art, the Alexandria Museum of Fine Arts,", "id": "20027089" }, { "contents": "Patrick Huse\n\n\nPatrick Huse (born April 1, 1948) is a Norwegian painter and multimedia artist. He studied landscape art and conceptualism during the late 1970,s and early 1980,s. His works incorporate techniques as painting, drawing, photograph, video, wall based text material and objects. His work is described by Matthew Kangas, Seattle’s leading critic for thirty years, interprets Patrick Huse’s art in the light of this narrative when he gave a great deal of praise in the Seattle Times about “Rift” in the Frye Art Museum,", "id": "11106855" }, { "contents": "Anatoly Konenko\n\n\ndesigner of eye-surgery instruments. Konenko began to create miniature works in 1981. Konenko's works often reference Russian fables and fairy tales; some of his most famous creations include \"The Savvy Flea\", \"The Grasshopper Violinist\" and \"A Caravan of Camels in the Eye of the Needle\".Since 2007, his son has worked with him. Konenko works in a variety of media, using human hair, poppy seeds, and rice as surfaces. Some of his works include living animals. In 2011, he", "id": "13884658" }, { "contents": "John Coleman (artist)\n\n\nJohn Coleman is an American sculptor and painter. His subject matter focuses on the American West, especially Native American historical and mythological figures of Southwestern United States. His works are held in the permanent collections of the Briscoe Western Art Museum, Desert Caballeros Western Museum, Joslyn Art Museum, Gilcrease Museum, National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum, Phoenix Art Museum, Tucson Museum of Art, and . Coleman was born in 1949 in Southern California, and grew up in Manhattan Beach, California. He was the second child of three", "id": "21390175" }, { "contents": "Hyman Bloom\n\n\nkey figure in the Boston Expressionist school. Because he worked slowly, often taking years to complete a painting, he left a relatively small body of work. He said a piece was finished \"when the mood is as intense as it can be made.\" His work is included in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Smithsonian's Hirshhorn Museum, the National Academy of Design, and many others.", "id": "20419535" }, { "contents": "Mihran Hakobyan\n\n\nMihran Hakobyan (; born February 18, 1984) is an Armenian sculptor. He created the \"Wikipedia Monument\" in Słubice, the first one of its type. Mihran Hakobyan was born in Stepanakert. His father, sculptor Armen Hakobyan (1941–1990). died during the Nagorno-Karabakh War. From 2000 to 2006, he studied sculpting at the Yerevan State Academy of Fine Arts. He thereafter worked in his profession in Armenia and Russia, participated in several exhibitions in Stepanakert and Yerevan. In 2001, he became a member", "id": "6957383" }, { "contents": "Hair museum\n\n\nStates. This form of art consisted of necklaces, bracelets, rings, lockets, paintings, and medallions. These items would be embellished with strands of hair from a loved one. A pottery center/guest house in Avanos, Turkey created the Avanos Hair Museum; its displays are thousands of locks of hair, all from female visitors. Reportedly the local potter, Chez Galip, was bidding farewell to a friend of his when he asked for something to remember her by, and she cut off a piece of her hair", "id": "1463958" }, { "contents": "Stepan Veranian\n\n\nNovember 1981, he had his first show at the Artists' Union of Armenia and then at the Modern Art Museum, Yerevan (MAMY). In 1991 his work \"Migration (tales of the Aegean Sea, sheet 02 and 03)\" was acquired by the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts, Moscow. Known in art circles, Veranian was largely unknown by the public until he appeared on Armenian TV in 1997, after the XLVII Venice Biennale International Exhibition of Art. In the Armenian Pavilion there Veranian exhibited his \"", "id": "5967693" }, { "contents": "Ashot Melkonian\n\n\n, Armenia, where his family moved in 1935 when he was 5. His mother, who was an artist and a teacher, taught him to love and understand music, and his uncle, who was a stage designer, introduced him to painting. During World War II, Melkonian studied in S. Merkurov art school and at the same time worked in the theater of Gyumri. In those years, he greatly benefited from powerful influence of Melikset Svakchyan, one of the most brilliant Armenian artists and stage designers. Thereafter in 1946", "id": "14910718" }, { "contents": "Suvigya Sharma\n\n\nSuvigya Sharma (born 28 July 1983) is an Indian artist, painter, fashion designer, who does miniature paintings, Tanjore painting, fresco work and portraits. He has worked in restoring fresco painting at City Palace at Jaipur, Jama Masjid and Singapore Art Museum. His works fall under miniature art work in India. In February, 2016, Suvigya Sharma his art work \"Timeless Miniature Art\" was showcased at Make in India event, with a live demonstration of Miniature-painting technologies in Mumbai. He is Asia Book", "id": "19601620" }, { "contents": "Ba Kyi\n\n\n, India. The paintings he made for Yangon's Strand Hotel show a humorous eye for the lighter side of Burmese character. Outside Myanmar, his works are on display in the Tashkent Museum, the Beijing National Museum, the Tropical Museum Amsterdam, and the Bodhgaya Museum in India. According to his resume, his works are also in the Sukarno Collection in Indonesia and the Collection of the King of Thailand. Min Naing, the art historian and painter who was a student of Ba Kyi, said of his work: \"", "id": "9480292" }, { "contents": "Tony Scherman\n\n\nTony Scherman (born 1950) is a Canadian painter. He is known for his use of encaustic and portraiture to depict persons and events of historical or popular significance. Scherman has had solo shows in galleries and regional museums throughout Canada and the United States. His expressive work often depicts historical figures and events, from Napoleon to Hamlet to the American Civil War. He is particularly known for a cycle of paintings of Napoleon and the French Revolution collected in the 2002 art book, \"Chasing Napoleon: Forensic Portraits\". Scherman", "id": "14138419" }, { "contents": "Nicholas Herrera\n\n\nthe form of statuettes, sculptures inspired by modern issues, lithographs and plaster images. Much of his inspiration comes from a serious car accident that put Herrera into a coma, during which he claims he saw a figure of death. As a result, his spiritual iconic style was born. His work is in the permanent collections of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Autry Museum of the American West, the Museum of International Folk Art, the Flatwater Folk Art Museum and the Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery. He is represented by EVOKE", "id": "6076668" }, { "contents": "Horace Pippin\n\n\nfrom his diary during the war. World War I was the time he began his artworks and many of his come from his time in the war. Many of Pippin's other works depict are of landmarks and buildings that he could observe. He used these painting to self improve on his skills as he was a self-taught artist. Although he painted only about 140 works, concentrations of his work can be found in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, N.Y.; Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington,", "id": "3956203" }, { "contents": "Hipolito Vázquez Sánchez\n\n\nhe continues to do wood carving on his own. His work has appeared in over 155 individual and collective exhibitions in both Mexico and abroad. He generally works in poplar, cedar, mahogany and Indian sandalwood, and occasionally with cypress, using a large collection of cutting implements, which he has made himself. His best works are those made from a single piece of wood, often based on nativity scenes. Often these require the careful excavation of miniature figures. Other themes include those related to the sea, traditional festivals such", "id": "8834859" }, { "contents": "John Woodrow Wilson\n\n\ntoward clarity, toward truth.\" Wilson helped found a museum called the National Center of Afro-American Artists (NCAAA) in Roxbury, where he was born. In this museum, there is an exhibit honoring the life and work of Wilson, which is called John Wilson Remembered 1923–2015. This temporary exhibit included many of his sculptures and graphic art Wilson is represented by Martha Richardson. He had his work featured around Boston throughout his life, including pieces of art in the Museum of Fine Arts and at Martha Richardson Fine", "id": "4225348" }, { "contents": "Vasa Mihich\n\n\nas a professor emeritus, Vasa focuses on his conceptual art practice. His studio, designed to accommodate the technology required for his work, is located in the heart of Los Angeles. He makes laminated acrylic sculptures that reflect and refract light. He has had solo exhibitions at galleries in the United States, Japan, Italy and Serbia, including the Museum of Contemporary Art, Belgrade, the San Diego Museum of Art, and the Palm Springs Desert Museum. Vasa is best known for his sculptures made from colored pieces of the", "id": "883205" }, { "contents": "Barry Masteller\n\n\nArt, Santa Cruz Museum of Art and History, The Palm Springs Museum of Art, Crocker Art Museum, the Triton Museum of Art and the Monterey Museum of Art. He began painting as a teen and is mostly self-taught. During the 1960s his work was figure based and focused on portraits and abstracted landscapes. During the 1970s he moved toward a more surreal style in the manner of Rene Magritte and the Italian abstract artist Alberto Burri who influenced his use of cut and found fabrics often hand stitched to the canvas", "id": "10853058" }, { "contents": "David Sharpe (artist)\n\n\nDavid Sharpe (born 1944) is an American artist, known for his stylized and expressionist paintings of the figure and landscape and for early works of densely packed, organic abstraction. He was trained at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and worked in Chicago until 1970, when he moved to New York City, where he remains. Sharpe has exhibited at the Whitney Museum of American Art, Art Institute of Chicago, Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (MCA), The Drawing Center, Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art,", "id": "6385701" }, { "contents": "Tony Pro\n\n\nTony Pro (born September 1973) is an American realist painter known for his paintings of the human figure, still life, and landscapes. He studied art in Westlake Village at the California Art Institute under the illustrator Glen Orbik. In 2005, Pro was awarded the American National Award of Excellence 'Best of Show' at the 14th Annual Oil Painters of America National Show for his painting \"Mother's Love\". Pro's work hangs in museums, government facilities and private collections around the world. His painting, \"", "id": "14256516" }, { "contents": "Tom Cramer\n\n\nSchnitzer Museum in Eugene Oregon, the Boise Art Museum in Idaho. Cramer made a name for himself in the 1980's and 1990's becoming a bridge between historical Oregon artists like Clifford Gleason and Milton Wilson and the international influx of new artists to the city since the mid-1990's. Tom Cramer grew up in Portland, Oregon in a musical family and played French horn in the Portland Youth Philharmonic in the late 1970's. He first started drawing in 1973 during this period and gradually became more interested in visual art. His", "id": "12634721" }, { "contents": "Self-portrait (Rembrandt, Indianapolis)\n\n\nused nearly monochromatic hues and incisive brushwork, delineating individual strands of hair by scratching into the wet paint, to create this emotionally charged portrait. Studies such as this enabled him to create his later great works of art, which portray so authentically the feelings of the subjects. At the time of this portrait's creation, Rembrandt was still a young, uncelebrated painter in his hometown, Leiden. Working as the master of his own tiny workshop, he honed his craft. Samuel van Hoogstraten, who studied with Rembrandt, later", "id": "20941685" }, { "contents": "Paul Strand\n\n\nstudio. Some of this early work, like the well-known \"Wall Street\", experimented with formal abstractions (influencing, among others, Edward Hopper and his idiosyncratic urban vision). Other of Strand's works reflect his interest in using the camera as a tool for social reform. He was one of the founders of the Photo League, an association of photographers who advocated using their art to promote social and political causes. Over the next few decades, Strand worked in motion pictures as well as still photography.", "id": "19172110" }, { "contents": "David Butler (sculptor)\n\n\nDavid Butler (1898–1997) was an African American sculptor and painter from Good Hope, Louisiana. His style is epitomized by kinetic sculptures made from recycled tin or wood, which he embellished with saturated colors and geometric patterns. His work is now in the permanent collections of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the American Folk Art Museum, and the Philadelphia Museum of Art. David Butler was eldest of eight children born to a carpenter, his father and a Baptist missionary, his mother. Born and raised in Good Hope, Louisiana", "id": "19859326" }, { "contents": "Edvard Baghdasaryan\n\n\nEdvard Baghdarsaryan () (14 November 1922– 5 November 1987) was an Armenian composer born in Yerevan. He was named an Honored Art Worker of the Armenian SSR in 1963. Baghdasaryan graduated from the Yerevan State Conservatory where he double majored both in piano with Sarajev and in composition with Yeghiazaryan. He did his graduate work in Moscow during 1951–53. He initially joined the composition faculty of Romanos Melikian Music School and later became a member of the Conservatory. Among his works are Symphonic Poem (1950), Sonata for clarinet", "id": "10519756" }, { "contents": "Larry Gagosian\n\n\nLawrence Gilbert \"Larry\" Gagosian (born April 19, 1945) is an American art dealer who owns the Gagosian Gallery chain of art galleries. Working in concert with collectors including Douglas S. Cramer, Eli Broad and Keith Barish he developed a reputation for staging museum quality exhibitions. Gagosian was born in Los Angeles, California, the elder of two siblings, to Armenian parents. His grandparents (original last name Ghoughasian) immigrated from the Ottoman Empire; he and his parents were born in California. Between 1963 and 1969,", "id": "17092285" }, { "contents": "John Woodrow Wilson\n\n\nwith the viewer. I hope the sculpture will stimulate people to learn more about King, to perpetuate his struggle.\" When Wilson described the bust, he went beyond the physical markings of the head, saying \"to [him] the eloquence of the piece is not only in the face, but in the rhythms of the gesture.\" In 1995, Wilson had an exhibit of his own work at the Museum of Fine Arts called Dialogue: John Wilson/Joseph Norman. The exhibit consisted of many of Wilson's", "id": "4225346" }, { "contents": "Miles B. Carpenter\n\n\nCarpenter House|His home became the Miles B. Carpenter Museum, which was established in 1986; the museum complex also contains the First Peanut Museum. It displays the largest collection of Carpenter's work anywhere in the world, as well as his tools and other items related to his career. Seven sculptures by Carpenter are owned by the [[Smithsonian American Art Museum]]. Three works are in the collection of the [[American Folk Art Museum]]. Four pieces are held by the [[Milwaukee Art Museum]]", "id": "8040683" }, { "contents": "Square Chikwanda\n\n\nSquare Chikwanda (born 1972) is a Zimbabwean sculptor, living and working in Harare, Zimbabwe. He first learned his art from his father, also a Zimbabwean sculptor. Born in Mvurwi, Chikwanda moved to the Tengenenge Sculpture Community with his father at the age of seven. There his father taught him at an early age to wash and polish stone. He finished primary school and learned the art of sculpture to become a full-time artist at the age of thirteen, developing his own style. At the Community he", "id": "6353261" }, { "contents": "Fred H. Roster\n\n\nchair of the sculpture program in 2016. Roster sculpts in rough-hewn wood, clay, and stone, often combining these materials in a single work. With the help of his students, he casts many of his own wood and clay sculptures in bronze. Moveable wheels are incorporated into many sculptures. Others include dogs, especially miniature schnauzers, which his mother raised. \"Untitled\" in the collection of the Honolulu Museum of Art is typical of his mixed media sculptures. The Hawaii State Art Museum and the Honolulu Museum", "id": "21368431" }, { "contents": "Stephen Laub\n\n\nand the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, among others. Laub's sculptures are in the permanent collection of the Yale University Art Gallery Laub's work is considered important in the Conceptual Art movement in California in the 1970s, alongside figures such as Chris Burden, John Baldessari, Edward Ruscha, Terry Fox, Paul Kos, Lynn Hershman, Bruce Nauman, Howard Fried, Tom Marioni, Allan Kaprow,and Theresa Hak Kyung Cha. He has exhibited in Europe since the 1970's, where his work has been associated with Actionism", "id": "20657044" }, { "contents": "Don Lundstrom\n\n\nDon Lundstrom is an American sculptor whose sculptures are featured in public institutions, churches, museums, and private collections principally in the Midwestern United States. Don Lundstrom is a native of Canton, Ohio and a graduate of Ohio University's School of Engineering. His work is expressed in cast bronze alloys, steel reinforced concrete, stainless steel, and hand-faceted slab glass. Usually figurative with a contemporary flare, he brings an emotional presence to his art. Since the late 1970s, Lundstrom 's sculptures have been acquired through juried", "id": "19134189" }, { "contents": "C. Paul Jennewein\n\n\nin the Van Nest section of the Bronx where he remained until 1978, the year of his death. The work that he is probably best known for today, and which garnered him much praise when it was unveiled in 1933, was the polychrome figures in the pediment of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Jennewein was one of 250 sculptors who exhibited in the 3rd Sculpture International held at the Philadelphia Museum of Art in the summer of 1949. In the course of their careers, Carl Paul Jennewein and his partner Warren Straton produced", "id": "10190264" }, { "contents": "George S. Zimbel\n\n\nGeorge S. Zimbel (born July 15, 1929) is an American-Canadian documentary photographer. He has worked professionally since the late 1940s, mainly as a freelancer. He was part of the Photo League and is one of its last surviving members. Born in Massachusetts, he settled in Canada about 1971. His works have been shown with increasing frequency since 2000, and examples of his work are part of several permanent collections including the Museum of Modern Art and the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts. He has been described as", "id": "20050754" }, { "contents": "Tigran Mansurian\n\n\nTigran Yeghiayi Mansurian (; born 27 January 1939) is a leading Armenian composer of classical music and film scores. Mansurian was born in Beirut. His family moved to Armenia in 1947 and settled in Yerevan in 1956, where he was educated. He studied first at the Romanos Melikian Music School under the Armenian composer Edvard Baghdasaryan and later at the Yerevan Komitas State Conservatory. His \"Monodia\" album was nominated for the 2005 Grammy Award for \"Best Instrumental Soloist(s) Performance (with Orchestra)\" and \"Best Classical Contemporary Composition", "id": "586173" }, { "contents": "Tim Hawkinson\n\n\nTim Hawkinson (born 1960) is an American artist who mostly works as a sculptor. Hawkinson was born in San Francisco, California in 1960. He received a BFA from San Jose State University in 1984, and a MFA from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1989. Hawkinson′s work is mostly sculptural, ranging in scale from minute to huge. His themes include his own body (although some of his work could be called self portraiture), music, and the passing of time, as well as his artistic", "id": "16149507" }, { "contents": "Takahiro Iwasaki\n\n\nTakahiro Iwasaki was born and raised in Hiroshima where he studied at the Hiroshima City University. He earned a Bachelor of Arts in Arts in 1998, a Master of Arts in 2001 and a Doctor of Philosophy in 2003. In 2005 he received a Master of Fine Arts from the Edinburgh College of Art. His most well-known series of works is \"Out of Disorder\", which reproduces architectural structures from rendered unusual materials such as hair, dust, threads, towels, and toothbrushes. Subjects include the Wonder Wheel in", "id": "7173595" }, { "contents": "David Stromeyer\n\n\nDavid Stromeyer (born 1946) is an American abstract sculptor who is best known for his large-scale, outdoor, painted steel sculptures. He currently resides in Enosburg Falls, Vermont, and Austin, Texas, with his wife, Sarah. His work can be found in Smithsonian American Art Museum, DeCordova Sculpture and Art Museum, Overland Park, Strathmore Hall Sculpture Garden in Bethesda, Cornell University, Plattsburgh State University, and corporate and private collections across the country. David Stromeyer was born in Marblehead, Massachusetts. In", "id": "7976037" }, { "contents": "Lionel White (musician)\n\n\nLionel White (1948–1998) was an American funk and punk rock musician who recorded music under the name \"Snuky Tate\". He is best remembered for his novelty single \"He's the Groove\" (1980) about Pope John Paul II. Lionel White was born in Wilmington, Delaware, United States in 1948 and studied painting at the University of Delaware. One of his influences was Jimi Hendrix. In the early 1970s he moved to San Francisco where he adapted a comedy character named \"Snuky Tate\", which he", "id": "20231412" }, { "contents": "Armen Martirosyan (musician)\n\n\nArmen Martirosyan (Armenian Արմեն Մարտիրոսյան, born on 18 February 1963 in Yerevan) is an Armenian musician and composer. His first music lessons were given in his early childhood by his grandmother, who taught him the rudiments of the notes. At the same time, his parents introduced him to different genres of musical art (ballet, opera and concerts of symphonic music). In 1970, aged seven, he entered the well-known music school being already familiar with the notes, having perfect pitch and a sense of rhythm", "id": "1385494" }, { "contents": "Ara Harutyunyan\n\n\nIn his childhood Ara was interested in painting, Vrubel’s works especially attracted his attention. His passion for sculpture started when during one visit to some village he found a piece of tufa and using the available tools hewed out a female’s head. After 7 years of studying at school A.Harutyunyan enrolled the Faculty of Painting of Art College from which he later switched to the Faculty of Sculpture. In 1948 two of his student works were represented at the exhibition in the foyer of the Spendiaryan Theatre (Yerevan). After graduating from", "id": "5366668" }, { "contents": "Hagop Ishkanian\n\n\nsenior lecturer at the Yerevan Pedagogical Institute. In 1977 he emigrated to the United States where he continues to live and work. Hagop Ishkanian's works are housed in the National Gallery of Armenia and private collections around the world. In the United States, Ishkanian worked as an exterior and interior designer creating bespoke art and fixtures for a range of clients. He also briefly taught jewellery making at Torrance Joslyn Art Center (from 1990 to 1994). In addition to his sculpting, Ishkanian is also an avid philatelist. Since the", "id": "9231842" }, { "contents": "Lawrence Tenney Stevens\n\n\nLawrence Tenney Stevens (1896-1972) was an American sculptor who was one of the progenitors of the \"Cowboy High Style\" movement in western American art and furniture. He created large allegorical figures and stylized depictions of the American west. Born in Massachusetts in 1896, Stevens first showed an interest in sculpture in his early adolescence, and began experimenting with figures after his grandfather demonstrated how to carve figures from a broken alabaster vase.  He continued to study sculpture throughout high school, his progress prompting the art director for the", "id": "12316293" }, { "contents": "Juan Sanchez (artist)\n\n\nJuan Sánchez (born July 1954) -- also Juan Sanchez -- is an American artist and one of the most important Nuyorican cultural figures to emerge in the second half of the 20th century. Born to Puerto Rican parents in Brooklyn, New York, his works include photography, paintings and mixed media works. His pieces are held in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art, among others. He is part of a generation of artists—such as Coco", "id": "12485498" }, { "contents": "Kōjirō Matsukata\n\n\ninterests. Masukata invested his significant personal fortune in the acquisition of several thousand examples of Western painting, sculpture and decorative arts. He collected these art works throughout Europe, but primarily in Paris. Mutsukata bought the Rodin masterpiece, \"Gates of Hell\", which is currently to be seen at the Rodin Museum in Paris; and the sculptures on display in the NMWA entrance plaza were made from the same original molds. In the end, he hoped to see his collections in an art museum in Tokyo where visitors could come", "id": "19774403" }, { "contents": "Axel Petersson Döderhultarn\n\n\nstrokes, but, from an artist with sure eye and nimble hands. It is a new conception with a personal touch...small masterpieces of complete nonconformative art.\"\" After his success with the Stockholm exhibition some of the museums in Sweden began purchasing his work. He had many requests to exhibit his work throughout Europe and the United States. In 1911 fifty-seven of his figures were on display in Oskarshamn, and the groundwork was laid for a Döderhultarn Museum. The next year some of his work was shipped to", "id": "14881124" }, { "contents": "Robert Graham (sculptor)\n\n\nLos Angeles in the early 1970s. His first solo exhibition in a museum was at the Dallas Museum of Art in 1972. Since then he has had dozens of one-man shows, including several at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Graham used a range of materials and scales in his work. In the 1970s he created very small wax sculptures (circa ) in miniature dioramas, depicting people interacting in various contemporary environments, such as a living room or a beach scene. Some of these interactions included sexual congress", "id": "14701678" }, { "contents": "Stephen Gamson\n\n\nStephen Gamson (born 1965) is an American artist and art collector. Gamson spent much of his youth visiting studios, museums, and researching art through books. As a student, he began collecting the work of artists he admired. After post-graduate studies in art history at Harvard University, in the early 1990s, Gamson had a one man show at the Candide Gallery in Atlanta, Georgia. In 2004, Gamson was the featured artist for the Nautica Project. This permanent show includes his creation of two aluminum sculptures", "id": "15188752" }, { "contents": "Soteno family\n\n\n. Oscar created a tree to honor his grandmother, Modesta, who died in 1987. This prizewinning sculpture features a figure of Modesta, sitting in a chair painting a tiny mermaid figure. The rest of the tree has small scale representations of typical Mexican handcrafts including a miniature Tree of Life. It is to represent what she began making, which at first were whistles and piggy banks. He was also commissioned for sculptures by John Paul II . Oscar has exhibited extensively in national and international museums. His pieces stand out for", "id": "21241472" }, { "contents": "Charles Searles\n\n\nUniversity Art Museum. The exhibition showed works from throughout his life, beginning with his figure drawings from the 1960s, sculptures and paintings from the 1970s, and later abstract works. The Tyler School of Art at Temple University displayed 17 large-scale paintings and sculptures by Searles from April 20 – June 16, 2013. The exhibition also featured a symposium by students who performed dance and visual art pieces inspired by Searles. The papers of Charles Searles were featured in an exhibit on view at the Lawrence A. Fleischmann Gallery in Washington", "id": "3311566" }, { "contents": "Ara Shiraz\n\n\nAra Shiraz (, June 8, 1941 – March 18, 2014) was an Armenian sculptor. His mother and father were the poets Silva Kaputikyan and Hovhannes Shiraz. Ara Shiraz was born Aramazd Karapetyan () in Yerevan in 1941. He graduated from the Yerevan Theatre and Fine Arts Institute in 1966. He participated in numerous young artists exhibitions in Armenia and the Soviet Union. From 1968 until his death in 2014 he was a member of the Artists' Union of Armenia. His works have been exhibited in major cities of", "id": "4835462" }, { "contents": "Pal Homonai\n\n\nfrom the cliff of his artistic mind, he creates a panoramic view. There is a lot of free space in his paintings where life events are often synthesized like miniatures. By shifting from hills to planes, from striped to dotty furrows, from human to animal figures, he stresses the sound and rhythm of his compositions. His paintings are on permanent display of galleries and museums worldwide. Great and representative collections of his works are in Museum of Naïve and Marginal Art (MNMA), Jagodina, Serbia. He was many", "id": "4756214" }, { "contents": "Henrik Siravyan\n\n\nHenrik Siravyan was born in Yerevan, Armenia. 1943–1948 studied at the Terlemezian School of Arts in Yerevan. 1948–1954 studied at the Yerevan's State Fine Arts and Theatre Institute. Since 1956 Member of the Armenian Union of Artists. 1958–1966 Siravyan worked in Martiros Saryan's studio. Henrik Siravyan participated in exhibitions in Lisbon, Portugal, Copenhagen, Denmark, Buenos Aires, Argentina, Paris, Vienna, Austria, Bologna, Italy, and Marseille. His works can be found in the museums and galleries in Yerevan, Moscow, Saint", "id": "511672" }, { "contents": "Brad Kahlhamer\n\n\nBrad Kahlhamer (born 1956) is an artist known for his multi-media practice, ranging from sculpture and painting to performance and music. He is currently based in New York City, working from his studio in Brooklyn. His work has been collected by institutions such as the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Denver Art Museum, the Milwaukee Art Museum, and the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art, Seattle Art Museum, the Hood Museum of Art, and", "id": "21755447" }, { "contents": "Satoru Abe\n\n\na Guggenheim Fellowship. Abe returned to Hawai'i in 1970, and in the same year was offered a National Endowment for the Arts Artist in Resident grant. Abe believes in reincarnation and this has influenced his work. Abe is best known for his sculptures of abstracted natural forms, many of which resemble trees, such as \"East and West\" in the collection of the Hawaii State Art Museum. He also painted. \"Two Abstract Figures\" in the collection of the Honolulu Museum of Art typifies this aspect of his work.", "id": "14796649" }, { "contents": "Mike Roy\n\n\nJoseph Michel Roy (1921–1996) was a Canadian comic book and comic strip artist, working during the Golden Age of Comic Books and the Silver Age of Comic Books. He is best known for his stories about Native Americans. Born in Quebec, Roy he emigrated to the United States where he studied at the School of Industrial Art and Pratt Institute. He was a co-founder of a museum of Native American and Eskimo art. Roy got his first job in comics in 1940, as an assistant to \"Sub-", "id": "16976484" }, { "contents": "Serrano Bou\n\n\ninternational, showed new and outstanding art creations and presentations. Besides his paintings, his art pieces include art installations, social and urban art presentations, paintings with metal oxidation, collages, sculptures and figurative pieces of social content with recycled plastics glued with silicon. Serrano Bou customizes each of his exhibitions, as he did in the summer of 2010 in a historic castle in Lake Garda, Italy. In 2005 he worked in Miami with Tony Goldman, of Goldman Properties, on the exhibition that marked his effort with the Museum of", "id": "6166543" }, { "contents": "S. Nandagopal\n\n\n. His focus was in sculptures, mostly in copper and bronze, and he was known for large metal sculptures. Later, he also indulged in painting and wrote a book on his father, titled \"Paniker\", which is one of the few studies on K. C. C Paniker. His contributions were also reported in the establishment of an open-air theatre and the Museum of the Madras Art Movement at Cholamandal and his works have been exhibited in several exhibitions including the exhibition at the Singapore Art Museum in 2006 where most", "id": "12531933" }, { "contents": "John Heard (musician)\n\n\nPittsburgh. He returned to music and went to Buffalo and later to California. In the 1980s he had converted a North Hollywood garage into a studio and was spending much time there painting. He said that he was hanging out with Santa Monica-based sculptor, Jim Casey who was teaching him the way he wanted to learn. 18 months prior to his being interviewed for the article he had taken up sculpturing. His first one was a bust of Duke Ellington then one of Billy Eckstine. At the time he was working", "id": "21832734" }, { "contents": "Leo Smith (sculptor)\n\n\nLeo R. Smith (born 1947) is an American sculptor and folk artist from Winona, Minnesota, Minnesota. He works primarily in wood. Life on the Mississippi River, past and present, local people, and the flora & fauna provide inspiration for Smith's lifelike folk figures. His innovative work has been exhibited in museums, galleries and fine shops and has brought wide acclaim throughout the US. A collection of over 400 Leo Smith sculptures is displayed on a rotating basis at the Minnesota Marine Art Museum in Winona, MN", "id": "10420099" }, { "contents": "Henri Marchand (sculptor)\n\n\nHenri Marchand (1887–1960) was a French-American sculptor known for his detailed museum dioramas. Born in France, Marchand studied under Auguste Rodin. In the early 1900s, he and his wife Clothilde, also an artist, emigrated to the United States. Marchand began working as a diorama artist at the New York State Museum. His work on the museum's Iroquois dioramas, dedicated in 1918, earned him recognition. In 1925, Marchand and his family moved to Buffalo, New York, where he and his sons Paul", "id": "1414290" }, { "contents": "Fritz White\n\n\nhe joined the Cowboy Artists of America in 1972. In 1978, he was one of the first artists to move to Loveland, Colorado; it later became an art colony for sculptors. White turned an old church into his studio. White won seven gold medals for his sculptures from the CAA. His work was added to the collections of the Gilcrease Museum and the Phoenix Art Museum. A large sculpture he designed for the Museum of Western Art in Kerrville, Texas stands in front of the main entrance. With his wife", "id": "2599837" }, { "contents": "Armen Movsessian\n\n\nArmen Movsessian (, born in Yerevan, Armenia) is a violin player. His formal training as a musician began as a child. He received his high school diploma from the Tchaikovsky's School of Music for the musically gifted, and earned his B.A. and Master’s from the Yerevan Conservatory named after Komitas. He was one of only fifty-four violinists worldwide to be invited to compete in the International Violin Competition of Indianapolis in 1990. This is when he decided to move to the United States and has since been named", "id": "10426515" }, { "contents": "Boxing in Armenia\n\n\nfor the Soviet Union at the Melbourne Olympics. Soviet Armenian boxing reached it peak during the period from 1970s to early 1990s. Notable figures of the era include Mekhak Ghazaryan and Israyel Hakobkokhyan, with the later becoming a World Amateur Champion in 1989. In 1957 Yengibaryan was awarded both the Honoured Master of Sports of the USSR and the Order of the Red Banner of Labour for his achievements in boxing. After finishing his career, he founded the first in the USSR Boxing Children and Youth Sport School in Yerevan. Armenia became an", "id": "12487680" }, { "contents": "Lyrical abstraction\n\n\nseveral others formed the Bay Area Figurative School with a return to Figurative painting. During the period between the fall 1964 and the spring of 1965 Diebenkorn traveled throughout Europe, he was granted a cultural visa to visit and view Henri Matisse paintings in important Soviet museums. He traveled to the then Soviet Union to study Henri Matisse paintings in Russian museums that were rarely seen outside of Russia. When he returned to painting in the Bay Area in mid-1965 his resulting works summed up all that he had learned from his more than a decade", "id": "6066615" }, { "contents": "William Harrison Scarborough\n\n\nanother for its quarters. Other sitters included James Chesnut and Wade Hampton. He continued traveling, visiting Charleston and Nashville on business and touring Europe, stopping in London, Paris, and Rome, in 1857. He is known to have produced portrait miniatures during his career as well, although few are extant; a pair are currently in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He also kept meticulous account books, listing his sitters and the proceeds he received from his work. Prices for his paintings could reach upwards of", "id": "18390094" }, { "contents": "Jason Teraoka\n\n\nJason Jun Teraoka (born 1964) is a figurative painter who was born in Kapaʻa, Hawaiʻi. He is a fourth-generation Japanese-American who lives and works in Honolulu, and is largely self-taught. In 2000, he received the Hawaii State Foundation on Culture and the Arts Arts Acquisition Award, and in 2001 he received the Reuben Tam Award for Painting from the Honolulu Museum of Art. The artist is known for his toy-like sculptures and narrative portraits. Teraoka's Neighbors series comprises 6-by-8-inch portraits,", "id": "17801518" }, { "contents": "Murad Hasratyan\n\n\nMurad Hasratyan (; born June 20, 1935) is an Armenian architectural historian. He was born in Yerevan to an educated family. His father, Morus Hasratyan was a renowned historian-philologist, honorary figure of the Armenian SSR, the first student of the Faculty of History at Yerevan State University, later, he was the Director of History Museum of Armenia. In 1958 he graduated from the Architecture Department of the Yerevan Polytechnic Institute with a diploma of excellence, receiving the qualification \"Architect\" At the institute he was taught", "id": "9917133" }, { "contents": "Yang Yang (painter)\n\n\nYang Yang (; born 1953) is a Chinese-born American contemporary artist and sculptor. He creates figurative paintings and sculptures of unconventional forms. Lui Qi Wei, curator of the Museum of Fine Art in Shaanxi, describes Yang Yang's work as combining the quality of the \"Oriental mystics with tragic magnificence.\" The medium of Yang Yang's works range from works on paper and canvas to sculptural works in fiberglass, ceramic or bronze. Yang Yang's works are internationally recognized and collected. His exhibitions include the Museum or", "id": "7832602" }, { "contents": "Gagik Badalyan\n\n\nGagik Badalyan (born 26 March 1980) is an Armenian classical, pop and folk singer. Gagik Badalyan was born in Armenia in 1980. He studied music and graduate from the prestigious Komitas Conservatory of Yerevan. Gagik is well versed in classical, pop and Armenian traditional songs. He is an artist, musician, singer and vocal coach. At an early age, Gagik Badalyan performed concerts in Europe, Russia, Lebanon, Syria, Egypt, Australia and United States. His work and genre register as a smooth revival of", "id": "5522885" }, { "contents": "Richard MacDonald\n\n\nRichard MacDonald (born 1946) is a California-based contemporary figurative artist known for his bronze sculptures and his association with Cirque Du Soleil Educated in painting and illustration at the Art Center College of Design, MacDonald was successful as a commercial illustrator until his late thirties when a fire destroyed his studio, along with the accumulated works of his career as painter and illustrator. Subsequently, he began sculpting in earnest and within ten years became one of the most collected present-day figurative sculptors in America. His work has been acquired", "id": "10820164" }, { "contents": "Ștefan Macovei\n\n\ndrawings which he transposed in 3D pieces of works had made him choose sculpture as his main specialization. He made his apprenticeship and learned the trade of the sculptural monumental art in the studios where the great monuments for the public area were made at that time. In 1973 he moved to the town of Ploiești, where he opened his own studio making his debut as a sculptor at the biennial exhibitions of the Prahova county. From that moment his creative activity has been an ongoing process. He approached both the figurative and non-", "id": "7425063" }, { "contents": "Nicolas Poussin\n\n\nmake detailed figure drawings as preparation for painting, and he seems not to have used assistants in the execution of his paintings. He produced few drawings as independent works, aside from the series of drawings illustrating Ovid's Metamorphoses he made early in his career. His drawings, typically in pen and ink wash, include landscapes drawn from nature to be used as references for painting, and composition studies in which he blocked in his figures and their settings. To aid him in formulating his compositions he made miniature wax figures and arranged", "id": "15926129" }, { "contents": "Dennis Kardon\n\n\nWhitney Museum Independent Study Program. He also attended the Yale School of Art at the Norfolk summer program, studying with Al Held, Judy Pfaff and Chuck Close. Kardon began exhibiting his work in the 1970s. His early black and white cut-paper pieces, shown at the Drawing Center (1980) and Barbara Toll Fine Art (1981), played with figure-ground relationships. His woodblock prints were included in a 1983 exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art called \"Prints from Blocks: Gauguin to Now\".", "id": "19416080" }, { "contents": "Martiros Saryan\n\n\na deputy to the USSR Supreme Soviet and was awarded the Order of Lenin three times and other awards and medals. He was a member of the USSR Art Academy (1974) and Armenian Academy of Sciences (1956). Saryan died in Yerevan on 5 May 1972. His former home in Yerevan is now a museum dedicated to his work with hundreds of items on display. He was buried in Yerevan at the Pantheon next to Komitas Vardapet. His son Ghazaros (Lazarus) Saryan was a composer and educator. His great", "id": "1089194" } ]