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Culture of Sussex

Index Culture of Sussex

The culture of Sussex refers to the pattern of human activity and symbolism associated with Sussex and its people. [1]

461 relations: 'Allo 'Allo!, A Visit to the Seaside, A. A. Milne, ABBA, Academy Awards, Adrian Brunel, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, All England Jumping Course at Hickstead, Andrew Boorde, Anglo-Saxon architecture, Anna Massey, Anohni, Anthem, Antony Hewish, Archbishop of Canterbury, Art colony, Arthur Conan Doyle, Arundel Castle, Arundel Castle Cricket Ground, Arundel Cathedral, Ashdown Forest, Aubrey Beardsley, BAFTA Award for Best Adapted Screenplay, Banoffee pie, Basques, Battle Abbey, Beer in Sussex, Bevis of Hampton, Bignor Roman Villa, Black comedy, Blackdown, West Sussex, Bloomsbury Group, Bramber Castle, Braxton Hicks contractions, Brett Anderson, Brick, Brightling Park, Brighton & Hove Albion F.C., Brighton Festival, Brighton Pride, Brighton Racecourse, Brighton Rock (1948 film), Brighton Rock (2010 film), Brighton School (filmmaking), British Airways i360, British regional literature, British Sea Power, Broadbridge Heath, Bud Flanagan, Bungaroosh, ..., Burns supper, Burwash, Carthusians, Cass Sculpture Foundation, Castle Goring, Catholic Church, Champagne, Champagne (wine region), Charles Bennett (screenwriter), Charles Frend, Charles Lennox, 3rd Duke of Richmond, Charleston Farmhouse, Chesney Allen, Chichester, Chichester Cathedral, Chichester Festival Theatre, Chiddingly, Children of Men, Christiaan Eijkman, Church of Scientology, Church of St Mary the Blessed Virgin, Sompting, Cissbury Ring, Claude Debussy, Cold Comfort Farm, Composite material, Conor Maynard, Coombes Church, Copley Fielding, Copper Family, Cottingley Fairies, Counties of England, Cowdray House, Crawley Town F.C., Cresta Run, Cricket, Crowborough, Cultural area, Culture of Cornwall, Culture of England, Culture of Yorkshire, Cuthmann of Steyning, David Hare (playwright), David Mumford, David Pilbeam, De La Warr Pavilion, Deadpan, Desmond Seward, Devil's Dyke, Sussex, Devil's Humps, Stoughton, Devil's Jumps, Treyford, Devolution, Diocese of Chichester, Ditchling, Documentary film, Dolly Collins, Dome Cinema, Worthing, Don Chaffey, Dora Gordine, Dorothea Tanning, Dorset, Double act, Dryad, Duke of Norfolk, Duke of York's Picture House, Brighton, Duncan Grant, Dunstan, E. F. Benson, E. M. Forster, Ebernoe Horn Fair, Economist, Ed Harcourt, Edward Burra, Edward Elgar, Edward James, Egremont Russet, Eileen Agar, Elizabeth Hawkins-Whitshed, Elizabethan era, English Football League, Eric Gill, Eric Ravilious, Eskimo words for snow, Esmé Collings, Europe, Eurovision Song Contest 1974, Fairy, Farley Farm House, Felpham, Fields Medal, Firle, Firle Corn, Fishbourne Roman Palace, Fitzwilliam Museum, Flanagan and Allen, Flint, Frank Bridge, Frederick Gowland Hopkins, Frederick Soddy, Fullerene, Fyssen Foundation, Gay pride, Genevieve (film), Geographical indications and traditional specialities in the European Union, Geography of Sussex, George Albert Smith (film pioneer), George Butterworth, George Smith (artist), George Wyndham, 3rd Earl of Egremont, Germanic peoples, Gideon Mantell, Gladiator (2000 film), Glyndebourne, Goodwood House, Goodwood Racecourse, Gorboduc (play), Graham Cutts, Granny Smith, Hall house, Hammond Innes, Harold Pinter, Harry Enfield, Harry Enfield's Television Programme, Harry Kroto, Harting, Harveys Brewery, Hastings, Hastings Castle, Hastings Pier, Henri Gaudier-Brzeska, Henry Burstow, Henry James, Henry Moore, Herstmonceux Castle, Hilaire Belloc, History of Sussex, Horsham, Hot pot, Hubert Parry, Human behavior, Ian Nairn, Iguanodon, Indo-Saracenic Revival architecture, International Mathematical Union, International Prize (Fyssen Foundation), International Style (architecture), Isaac Newton Telescope, Isle of Wight, Isotope, J. M. W. Turner, Jack Clayton, James Bachman, James Hannington, James Williamson (film pioneer), Jane Postlethwaite, Jean Dubuffet, Joan Morgan, Johann Rahn, John Braxton Hicks, John Constable, John Cowper Powys, John Fletcher (playwright), John Ireland (composer), John Maynard Keynes, John Pell, John Skelton (sculptor), Jubilee Library, Brighton, Kate Lee (English singer), Katie Johnson (English actress), Keane (band), Kent, Kevin the Teenager, Keynesian economics, Kingdom of Sussex, Kirsten Cooke, Knepp Castle, Knobby Russet, Knucker, La mer (Debussy), Lamb House, Laurence Olivier, László Moholy-Nagy, Lee Miller, Leo Sayer, Leofwynn, Leonard of Noblac, Leonard Woolf, Lesley Manville, Levellers (band), Lewes, Lewes Castle, Lewes Priory, Lily of the valley, List of Protestant martyrs of the English Reformation, Littlehampton, Lobsters (1936 film), Long Man of Wilmington, Lucy Broadwood, Lyminster, Lytton Strachey, Mad Jack Fuller, Madeline Smith, Man Ray, Manning Haynes, Maria Ann Smith, Martin Ryle, Mathematical tile, Maureen Duffy, Max Ernst, Max Miller (comedian), Mayfield and Five Ashes, Men Behaving Badly, Michael Drayton, Midhurst, Modernism, Monk's House, Mosaic, Mount Caburn, Mr. Bean, Mr. Turner, Mumford–Shah functional, Mural, Music of Sussex, My Boy Jack (film), Naiad, National Medal of Science, National Velvet (film), Neolithic, Nick Cave, Nobel Prize in Chemistry, Nobel Prize in Physics, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, Ogee, Oh! What a Lovely War, One More Time with Feeling, Oral tradition, Orangutan, Pablo Picasso, Pallant House Gallery, Parham Park, Passenger (singer), Patagonia, Patron saint, Paul Nash (artist), Paul Putner, Pell number, Pell's equation, Pennsylvania, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Pete McCarthy, Pete Walker (director), Peter Randall-Page, Petersfield, Petworth, Petworth House, Pevensey Castle, Philip Howard, 20th Earl of Arundel, Philip Jackson (sculptor), Phun City, Piltdown Man, Plumpton Racecourse, Plumpton, East Sussex, Poly-Olbion, Popular music, Pride parade, Puck of Pook's Hill, Quadrophenia (film), Quakers, Quarter session, Radioactive decay, Rag'n'Bone Man, Ralph Richardson, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Renaissance, René Magritte, Rewards and Fairies, Rice University, Richard of Chichester, Richard Smalley, Rizzle Kicks, Robert Curl, Robertsbridge, Robin Driscoll, Rodmell, Roger Fry, Roland Penrose, Roman Catholic Bishop of Arundel and Brighton, Roman mosaic, Romantic poetry, Romesh Ranganathan, Rottingdean, Royal Blood (band), Royal Institute of British Architects, Royal Observatory, Greenwich, Royal Pavilion, Rudyard Kipling, Rumer Godden, Rye, Saint Hill Manor, Salvador Dalí, Samuel Hieronymus Grimm, Sandstone, Scan Tester, Sea serpent, Sean Ellis, Selsey Abbey, Shadowlands (1993 film), Sheila Kaye-Smith, Shipley, West Sussex, Shirley Collins, Shoreham-by-Sea, Sidney Morgan, Simon Evans, Simon Nye, Sir William Burrell, 2nd Baronet, Slindon, Slindon Cricket Club, Smashie and Nicey, Social science, Society of Dependants, South Harting, South-up map orientation, Southern Combination Football League, St Botolph's Church, Hardham, St Hugh's Charterhouse, Parkminster, St John the Baptist's Church, Clayton, St Leonard's Forest, St Leonards-on-Sea, Stane Street (Chichester), Stella Gibbons, Stephen Grant (comedian), Stirling Prize, Stomp (theatrical show), Stoolball, Streat, Surrealism, Sussex, Sussex Bonfire Societies, Sussex by the Sea, Sussex County Cricket Club, Sussex County Football Association, Sussex Day, Sussex pond pudding, Sussex wine, Symbol, T. S. Eliot, Tapsel gate, Tarring, West Sussex, Tehuelche people, Test cricket, Thakeham, The 39 Steps (1935 film), The Ballad of Shirley Collins, The Chalk Garden (film), The Cure, The Feeling, The Four Men: a Farrago, The Go! Team, The Guild of St Joseph and St Dominic, The Invisible Man (1933 film), The Kooks, The Mayor of Casterbridge (1921 film), The Moo Man, The Moon and the Sledgehammer, The Pumpkin Eater, The Reader (2008 film), The Scousers, The Snowman, They Came from Somewhere Else, Thomas Becket, Thomas Bradwardine, Thomas May, Thomas Sackville, 1st Earl of Dorset, Thomas Weelkes, Tom Odell, Tony Hawks, Tudor architecture, Understatement, University of Sussex, Uppark, Vanessa Bell, Victorian era, Virginia Woolf, Vitamin, Vivien Leigh, We wunt be druv, Weald, Weald and Downland Gridshell, Wealden hall house, West Dean, West Sussex, West Grinstead, West Sussex, Westmeston, Wheatear, When the Wind Blows (1986 film), Wilfrid, Wilfrid Scawen Blunt, William Blake, William Collins (poet), William Hayley, William Henry Hudson, William Nicholson (writer), William Penn, William Shakespeare, Willingdon and Jevington, Winnie-the-Pooh, Wish You Were Here (1987 film), Worthing, Worthing Museum and Art Gallery, Worthing Symphony Orchestra, Zoe Lyons, 18th British Academy Film Awards. Expand index (411 more) »

'Allo 'Allo!

Allo Allo! is a BBC television British sitcom that was first broadcast on BBC One from 1982 to 1992, comprising 85 episodes.

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A Visit to the Seaside

A Visit to the Seaside (1908) was the first successful motion picture filmed in Kinemacolor.

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A. A. Milne

Alan Alexander Milne (18 January 1882 – 31 January 1956) was an English author, best known for his books about the teddy bear Winnie-the-Pooh and for various poems.

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ABBA

ABBA are a Swedish pop group, formed in Stockholm in 1972 by Agnetha Fältskog, Björn Ulvaeus, Benny Andersson, and Anni-Frid Lyngstad.

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Academy Awards

The Academy Awards, also known as the Oscars, are a set of 24 awards for artistic and technical merit in the American film industry, given annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS), to recognize excellence in cinematic achievements as assessed by the Academy's voting membership.

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Adrian Brunel

Adrian Brunel (4 September 1892 – 18 February 1958) was an English film director and screenwriter.

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Alfred, Lord Tennyson

Alfred Tennyson, 1st Baron Tennyson (6 August 1809 – 6 October 1892) was Poet Laureate of Great Britain and Ireland during much of Queen Victoria's reign and remains one of the most popular British poets.

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All England Jumping Course at Hickstead

The All England Jumping Course at Hickstead, known widely as Hickstead, is an equestrian sport centre in West Sussex, England, principally known for its showjumping activities, where it hosts two international level competitions, the British Jumping Derby and the Longines Royal International Horse Show.

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Andrew Boorde

Andrew Boorde (or Borde) (c. 1490April 1549) was an English traveller, physician and writer.

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Anglo-Saxon architecture

Anglo-Saxon architecture was a period in the history of architecture in England, and parts of Wales, from the mid-5th century until the Norman Conquest of 1066.

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Anna Massey

Anna Raymond Massey, CBE (11 August 19373 July 2011) was an English actress.

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Anohni

Anohni (styled as ANOHNI; born Antony Hegarty, October 1971) is an English-born singer, composer, and visual artist.

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Anthem

An anthem is a musical composition of celebration, usually used as a symbol for a distinct group, particularly the national anthems of countries.

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Antony Hewish

Antony Hewish (born 11 May 1924) is a British radio astronomer who won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1974 (together with fellow radio-astronomer Martin Ryle) for his role in the discovery of pulsars.

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Archbishop of Canterbury

The Archbishop of Canterbury is the senior bishop and principal leader of the Church of England, the symbolic head of the worldwide Anglican Communion and the diocesan bishop of the Diocese of Canterbury.

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Art colony

Artist houses in Montsalvat near Melbourne, Australia. An art colony or artists' colony is a place where creative practitioners live and interact with one another.

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Arthur Conan Doyle

Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle (22 May 1859 – 7 July 1930) was a British writer best known for his detective fiction featuring the character Sherlock Holmes.

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Arundel Castle

Arundel Castle is a restored and remodelled medieval castle in Arundel, West Sussex, England.

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Arundel Castle Cricket Ground

Arundel Castle Cricket Ground is a cricket ground in Arundel, West Sussex, England, nearby to Arundel Castle.

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Arundel Cathedral

The Cathedral Church of Our Lady and St Philip Howard is a Roman Catholic cathedral in Arundel, West Sussex, England.

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Ashdown Forest

Ashdown Forest is an ancient area of tranquil open heathland occupying the highest sandy ridge-top of the High Weald Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.

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Aubrey Beardsley

Aubrey Vincent Beardsley (21 August 187216 March 1898) was an English illustrator and author.

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BAFTA Award for Best Adapted Screenplay

The British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) Award for Best Adapted Screenplay has been presented to its winners since 1968, when the original category (BAFTA Award for Best Screenplay) was split into two awards, the other being the BAFTA Award for Best Original Screenplay.

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Banoffee pie

Banoffee pie is an English dessert pie made from bananas, cream and toffee (made from boiled condensed milk, or dulce de leche), combined either on a buttery biscuit base or one made from crumbled biscuits and butter.

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Basques

No description.

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Battle Abbey

Battle Abbey is a partially ruined Benedictine abbey in Battle, East Sussex, England.

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Beer in Sussex

Beer in Sussex is beer produced in the historic county of Sussex in England, a region divided for administrative purposes into East Sussex and West Sussex.

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Bevis of Hampton

Bevis of Hampton (Old French: Beuve(s) or Bueve or Beavis de Hanton(n)e; Anglo-Norman: Boeve de Haumtone; Italian: Buovo d'Antona) or Sir Bevois, was a legendary English hero and the subject of Anglo-Norman, Dutch, French, English, Venetian,Hasenohr, 173–4.

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Bignor Roman Villa

Bignor Roman Villa is a large Roman courtyard villa which has been excavated and put on public display on the Bignor estate in the English county of West Sussex.

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Black comedy

Black comedy, also known as dark comedy or gallows humor, is a comic style that makes light of subject matter that is generally considered taboo, particularly subjects that are normally considered serious or painful to discuss.

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Blackdown, West Sussex

Blackdown, or Black Down, is the highest hill in the historic county of Sussex, at 280 metres (919 feet).

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Bloomsbury Group

The Bloomsbury Group—or Bloomsbury Set—was a group of associated English writers, intellectuals, philosophers and artists, the best known members of which included Virginia Woolf, John Maynard Keynes, E. M. Forster and Lytton Strachey.

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Bramber Castle

Bramber Castle is a Norman motte-and-bailey castle formerly the caput of the large feudal barony of Bramber long held by the Braose family.

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Braxton Hicks contractions

Braxton Hicks contractions, also known as practice contractions, are sporadic uterine contractions that sometimes start around six weeks into a pregnancy.

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Brett Anderson

Brett Lewis Anderson (born 29 September 1967) is an English singer-songwriter best known as the lead vocalist of the band Suede.

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Brick

A brick is building material used to make walls, pavements and other elements in masonry construction.

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Brightling Park

Brightling Park (previously known as Rose Hill) is a country estate which lies in the parishes of Brightling and Dallington in the Rother district of East Sussex, England.

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Brighton & Hove Albion F.C.

Brighton & Hove Albion Football Club is a professional football club based in Falmer, East Sussex, England.

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Brighton Festival

The largest and most established annual curated multi-arts festival in England, Brighton Festival is a celebration of music, theatre, dance, circus, art, film, literature, debate, outdoor and family events, which takes place in venues both familiar and unusual in the city of Brighton and Hove in England each May.

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Brighton Pride

Brighton and Hove Pride is an annual event held in the city of Brighton and Hove, England, organised by Brighton Pride, a community interest company (CIC) who promote equality and diversity, and advance education to eliminate discrimination against the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community.

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Brighton Racecourse

Brighton Racecourse is an English horse racing venue located a mile to the northeast of the centre of Brighton, Sussex owned by the Arena Racing Company.

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Brighton Rock (1948 film)

Brighton Rock is a 1948 British gangster film noir directed by John Boulting and starring Richard Attenborough as violent gang leader Pinkie Brown (reprising his breakthrough West End creation of the character some three years earlier), Carol Marsh as the innocent girl he marries, and Hermione Baddeley as an amateur sleuth investigating a murder he committed.

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Brighton Rock (2010 film)

Brighton Rock is a 2010 British crime film loosely based on Graham Greene's 1938 novel of the same name.

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Brighton School (filmmaking)

Brighton School (fr.: L'école de Brighton) was a loosely associated group of pioneering filmmakers active in the Brighton and Hove area of England from 1896 to 1910.

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British Airways i360

British Airways i360 is a observation tower on the seafront of Brighton, East Sussex, England at the landward end of the former West Pier.

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British regional literature

The setting is particularly important in regional literature.

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British Sea Power

British Sea Power (BSP) are an indie rock band based in Brighton,, England, although three of the band members originally come from Kendal, Cumbria, England.

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Broadbridge Heath

Broadbridge Heath is a village and civil parish in the Horsham district of West Sussex, England.

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Bud Flanagan

Bud Flanagan, (born Chaim Reuben Weintrop, 14 October 1896 – 20 October 1968) was a popular British music hall and vaudeville entertainer and comedian, and later a television and film actor.

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Bungaroosh

Bungaroosh (also spelt bungeroosh, bungarouche, bungarooge, bunglarooge, bunglarouge and other variations) is a composite building material used almost exclusively in the English seaside resort of Brighton and its attached neighbour Hove between the mid-18th and late 19th centuries, when it grew from a fishing village into a large town.

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Burns supper

A Burns supper is a celebration of the life and poetry of the poet Robert Burns (25 January 175921 July 1796), the author of many Scots poems.

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Burwash

Burwash, archaically known as Burghersh, is a rural village and civil parish in the Rother District of Sussex, England.

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Carthusians

The Carthusian Order (Ordo Cartusiensis), also called the Order of Saint Bruno, is a Catholic religious order of enclosed monastics.

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Cass Sculpture Foundation

The Cass Sculpture Foundation is a charitable commissioning body based in Goodwood, Sussex, England.

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Castle Goring

Castle Goring is a Grade I listed country house in Worthing, in Sussex, England.

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Catholic Church

The Catholic Church, also known as the Roman Catholic Church, is the largest Christian church, with more than 1.299 billion members worldwide.

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Champagne

Champagne is sparkling wine or, in EU countries, legally only that sparkling wine which comes from the Champagne region of France.

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Champagne (wine region)

The Champagne wine region (archaic Champany) is a wine region within the historical province of Champagne in the northeast of France.

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Charles Bennett (screenwriter)

Charles Bennett (2 August 1899 – 15 June 1995) was an English playwright, screenwriter and director probably best known for his work with Alfred Hitchcock.

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Charles Frend

Charles Frend (21 November 1909, Pulborough, Sussex – 8 January 1977, London) was an English film director.

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Charles Lennox, 3rd Duke of Richmond

Field Marshal Charles Lennox, 3rd Duke of Richmond, 3rd Duke of Lennox, 3rd Duke of Aubigny, (22 February 1735 – 29 December 1806), styled Earl of March until 1750, was a British Army officer and politician.

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Charleston Farmhouse

Charleston, in East Sussex is a property associated with the Bloomsbury group, that is open to the public.

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Chesney Allen

William Ernest Chesney Allen (5 April 1894 – 13 November 1982) was a popular English entertainer of the Second World War period.

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Chichester

Chichester is a cathedral city in West Sussex, in South-East England.

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Chichester Cathedral

Chichester Cathedral, formally known as the Cathedral Church of the Holy Trinity, is the seat of the Anglican Bishop of Chichester.

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Chichester Festival Theatre

Chichester Festival Theatre, located in Chichester, Sussex, England, was designed by Philip Powell and Hidalgo Moya, and opened by its founder Leslie Evershed-Martin in 1962.

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Chiddingly

Chiddingly is a village and civil parish in the Wealden District of the administrative county of East Sussex, within historic Sussex, some five miles (8 km) northwest of Hailsham.

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Children of Men

Children of Men is a 2006 British-American dystopian thriller film directed and co-written by Alfonso Cuarón.

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Christiaan Eijkman

Christiaan Eijkman (11 August 1858 – 5 November 1930) was a Dutch physician and professor of physiology whose demonstration that beriberi is caused by poor diet led to the discovery of antineuritic vitamins (thiamine).

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Church of Scientology

The Church of Scientology is a multinational network and hierarchy of numerous ostensibly independent but interconnected corporate entities and other organizations devoted to the practice, administration and dissemination of Scientology, a new religious movement.

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Church of St Mary the Blessed Virgin, Sompting

The Church of St Mary the Blessed Virgin, also known as St Mary the Virgin Church and St Mary's Church, is the Church of England parish church of Sompting in the Adur district of West Sussex.

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Cissbury Ring

Cissbury Ring is a hill fort on the South Downs, in the borough of Worthing, England, and about from its town centre, in the county of West Sussex.

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Claude Debussy

Achille-Claude Debussy (22 August 1862 – 25 March 1918) was a French composer.

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Cold Comfort Farm

Cold Comfort Farm is a comic novel by English author Stella Gibbons, published in 1932.

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Composite material

A composite material (also called a composition material or shortened to composite, which is the common name) is a material made from two or more constituent materials with significantly different physical or chemical properties that, when combined, produce a material with characteristics different from the individual components.

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Conor Maynard

Conor Paul Maynard (born 21 November 1992) is an English singer-songwriter, record producer, YouTuber and actor from Brighton who is signed to Warner Music Group subsidiary, Parlophone.

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Coombes Church

Coombes Church is a Church of England parish church in the rural hamlet of Coombes in the Adur District of West Sussex, England.

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Copley Fielding

Anthony Vandyke Copley Fielding (22 November 1787 – 3 March 1855), commonly called Copley Fielding, was an English painter born in Sowerby, near Halifax, and famous for his watercolour landscapes.

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Copper Family

The Copper Family are a family of singers of traditional, unaccompanied English folk song.

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Cottingley Fairies

The Cottingley Fairies appear in a series of five photographs taken by Elsie Wright (1901–1988) and Frances Griffiths (1907–1986), two young cousins who lived in Cottingley, near Bradford in England.

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Counties of England

The counties of England are areas used for the purposes of administrative, geographical, cultural or political demarcation.

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Cowdray House

Cowdray House consists of the ruins of one of England's great Tudor houses, architecturally comparable to many of the great palaces and country houses of that time.

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Crawley Town F.C.

Crawley Town Football Club is a professional association football club based in the town of Crawley, West Sussex, England.

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Cresta Run

The Cresta Run is a natural ice skeleton racing toboggan track in eastern Switzerland.

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Cricket

Cricket is a bat-and-ball game played between two teams of eleven players each on a cricket field, at the centre of which is a rectangular pitch with a target at each end called the wicket (a set of three wooden stumps upon which two bails sit).

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Crowborough

Crowborough is a town in the Wealden district of East Sussex, England.

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Cultural area

In anthropology and geography, a cultural region, cultural sphere, cultural area or culture area refers to a geographical area with one relatively homogeneous human activity or complex of activities (culture).

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Culture of Cornwall

The culture of Cornwall (Gonisogeth Kernow) forms part of the culture of the United Kingdom, but has distinct customs, traditions and peculiarities.

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Culture of England

The culture of England is defined by the idiosyncratic cultural norms of England and the English people.

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Culture of Yorkshire

The culture of Yorkshire has developed over the county's history, influenced by the cultures of those who came to control the region, including the Celts (Brigantes and Parisii), Romans, Angles, Vikings and Normans.

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Cuthmann of Steyning

Cuthmann of Steyning (8th century), also spelt Cuthman, was an Anglo-Saxon hermit, church-builder and saint.

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David Hare (playwright)

Sir David Hare (born 5 June 1947) is an English playwright, screenwriter and theatre and film director.

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David Mumford

David Bryant Mumford (born 11 June 1937) is an American mathematician known for distinguished work in algebraic geometry, and then for research into vision and pattern theory.

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David Pilbeam

David Pilbeam (born 21 November 1940 in Brighton, Sussex, England) is the Henry Ford II Professor of the Social Sciences at Harvard University and curator of paleoanthropology at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology.

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De La Warr Pavilion

The De La Warr Pavilion is a grade I listed building, located on the seafront at Bexhill on Sea, East Sussex, on the south coast of England.

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Deadpan

Deadpan, dry humor or dry wit describes the deliberate display of a lack of or no emotion, commonly as a form of comedic delivery to contrast with the ridiculousness of the subject matter.

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Desmond Seward

Desmond Seward (born 22 May 1935, Paris) is a British popular historian and the author of many books, including biographies of Henry IV of France, Eleanor of Aquitaine, Marie Antoinette, Empress Eugenie and Napoleon's Family.

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Devil's Dyke, Sussex

Devil's Dyke is a 100m deep V-shaped valley on the South Downs Way in southern England, near Brighton and Hove.

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Devil's Humps, Stoughton

The Devil's Humps (also known as the Kings' Graves) are four Bronze Age barrows situated on Bow Hill on the South Downs near Stoughton, West Sussex.

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Devil's Jumps, Treyford

The Devil's Jumps are a group of five large bell barrows situated on the South Downs south-east of Treyford in the county of West Sussex in southern England.

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Devolution

Devolution is the statutory delegation of powers from the central government of a sovereign state to govern at a subnational level, such as a regional or local level.

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Diocese of Chichester

The Diocese of Chichester is a Church of England diocese based in Chichester, covering Sussex.

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Ditchling

Ditchling is a village and civil parish in the Lewes District of East Sussex, England.

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Documentary film

A documentary film is a nonfictional motion picture intended to document some aspect of reality, primarily for the purposes of instruction, education, or maintaining a historical record.

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Dolly Collins

Dorothy Ann Collins (6 March 1933 – 22 September 1995), was an English folk musician, arranger and composer.

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Dome Cinema, Worthing

The Dome Cinema, Worthing, West Sussex, England, is a grade II* listed building owned by PDJ Cinemas Ltd.

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Don Chaffey

Donald Chaffey (5 August 1917 – 13 November 1990) was a British film director, writer, producer, and art director.

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Dora Gordine

Dora Gordine (8th June 1895 – 29 December 1991) was an Estonian Modernist sculptor who spent the majority of her career in Britain.

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Dorothea Tanning

Dorothea Margaret Tanning (August 25, 1910 – January 31, 2012) was an American painter, printmaker, sculptor, writer, and poet.

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Dorset

Dorset (archaically: Dorsetshire) is a county in South West England on the English Channel coast.

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Double act

A double act, also known as a comedy duo, is a comic pairing in which humor is derived from the uneven relationship between two partners, usually of the same gender, age, ethnic origin and profession but drastically different in terms of personality or behavior.

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Dryad

A dryad (Δρυάδες, sing.: Δρυάς) is a tree nymph or tree spirit in Greek mythology.

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Duke of Norfolk

The Duke of Norfolk is the premier duke in the peerage of England, and also, as Earl of Arundel, the premier earl.

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Duke of York's Picture House, Brighton

The Duke of York's Picture House is an art house cinema in Brighton, England, which lays claim to being the oldest cinema in continuous use in Britain.

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Duncan Grant

Duncan James Corrowr Grant (21 January 1885 – 8 May 1978) was a British painter and designer of textiles, pottery, theatre sets and costumes.

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Dunstan

Dunstan (909 – 19 May 988 AD)Lapidge, "Dunstan (d. 988)" was successively Abbot of Glastonbury Abbey, Bishop of Worcester, Bishop of London, and Archbishop of Canterbury, later canonised as a saint.

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E. F. Benson

Edward Frederic "E.

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E. M. Forster

Edward Morgan Forster (1 January 18797 June 1970) was an English novelist, short story writer, essayist and librettist.

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Ebernoe Horn Fair

Ebernoe Horn Fair is held in the small Sussex village of Ebernoe, the location of which is about five miles north of Petworth.

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Economist

An economist is a practitioner in the social science discipline of economics.

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Ed Harcourt

Ed Harcourt is an English singer-songwriter.

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Edward Burra

Edward John Burra (29 March 1905 – 22 October 1976) was an English painter, draughtsman, and printmaker, best known for his depictions of the urban underworld, black culture and the Harlem scene of the 1930s.

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Edward Elgar

Sir Edward William Elgar, 1st Baronet (2 June 1857 – 23 February 1934) was an English composer, many of whose works have entered the British and international classical concert repertoire.

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Edward James

Edward William Frank James (16 August 1907 – 2 December 1984) was a British poet known for his patronage of the surrealist art movement.

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Egremont Russet

The Egremont Russet is a cultivar of dessert apple, of the russet type.

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Eileen Agar

Eileen Forrester Agar (1 December 1899 – 17 November 1991) was a British painter and photographer associated with the Surrealist movement.

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Elizabeth Hawkins-Whitshed

Elizabeth Hawkins-Whitshed (1860 – 27 July 1934), usually known after her third marriage as Mrs Aubrey Le Blond and to her climbing friends as Lizzie Le Blond, was an Irish pioneer of mountaineering at a time when it was almost unheard of for a woman to climb mountains.

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Elizabethan era

The Elizabethan era is the epoch in the Tudor period of the history of England during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I (1558–1603).

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English Football League

The English Football League (EFL) is a league competition featuring professional football clubs from England and Wales.

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Eric Gill

Arthur Eric Rowton Gill (22 February 1882 – 17 November 1940) was an English sculptor, typeface designer, and printmaker, who was associated with the Arts and Crafts movement.

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Eric Ravilious

Eric William Ravilious (22 July 1903 – 2 September 1942) was an English painter, designer, book illustrator and wood-engraver.

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Eskimo words for snow

The claim that Eskimo languages (specifically, Yupik and Inuit) have an unusually large number of words for "snow", first loosely attributed to the work of anthropologist Franz Boas, has become a cliché often used to support the controversial linguistic-relativity hypothesis: the idea that a language's structure (sound, grammar, vocabulary, etc.) shapes its speakers' view of the world.

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Esmé Collings

Arthur Albert 'Esme' Collings (1859 – 28 March 1936) was an English photographer, miniaturist and the first of the loose association of early film pioneers dubbed the Brighton School by French film historian Georges Sadoul.

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Europe

Europe is a continent located entirely in the Northern Hemisphere and mostly in the Eastern Hemisphere.

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Eurovision Song Contest 1974

The Eurovision Song Contest 1974 was the 19th edition of the annual Eurovision Song Contest.

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Fairy

A fairy (also fata, fay, fey, fae, fair folk; from faery, faerie, "realm of the fays") is a type of mythical being or legendary creature in European folklore, a form of spirit, often described as metaphysical, supernatural, or preternatural.

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Farley Farm House

Farleys House near Chiddingly, East Sussex, has been converted into a museum and archive featuring the lives and work of its former residents, the photographer Lee Miller and the Surrealist artist Roland Penrose.

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Felpham

Felpham (/ˈfɛlfəm/) is a village and civil parish in the Arun District of West Sussex, England.

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Fields Medal

The Fields Medal is a prize awarded to two, three, or four mathematicians under 40 years of age at the International Congress of the International Mathematical Union (IMU), a meeting that takes place every four years.

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Firle

Firle (Sussex dialect: Furrel) is a village and civil parish in the Lewes District of East Sussex, England.

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Firle Corn

Firle Corn in Firle, East Sussex is a nearly lost hill figure whose existence can be seen by infrared photography.

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Fishbourne Roman Palace

Fishbourne Roman Palace is in the village of Fishbourne, Chichester in West Sussex.

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Fitzwilliam Museum

The Fitzwilliam Museum is the art and antiquities museum of the University of Cambridge, located on Trumpington Street opposite Fitzwilliam Street in central Cambridge, England.

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Flanagan and Allen

Flanagan and Allen were a British singing and comedy double act popular during World War II.

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Flint

Flint is a hard, sedimentary cryptocrystalline form of the mineral quartz, categorized as a variety of chert.

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Frank Bridge

Frank Bridge (26 February 187910 January 1941) was an English composer, violist and conductor.

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Frederick Gowland Hopkins

Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins (20 June 1861 – 16 May 1947) was an English biochemist who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1929, with Christiaan Eijkman, for the discovery of vitamins, even though Casimir Funk, a Polish biochemist, is widely credited with discovering vitamins.

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Frederick Soddy

Frederick Soddy FRS (2 September 1877 – 22 September 1956) was an English radiochemist who explained, with Ernest Rutherford, that radioactivity is due to the transmutation of elements, now known to involve nuclear reactions.

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Fullerene

A fullerene is a molecule of carbon in the form of a hollow sphere, ellipsoid, tube, and many other shapes.

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Fyssen Foundation

The Fyssen Foundation (French: Fondation Fyssen) is a French charitable organization that was established and endowed in 1979 by H. Fyssen.

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Gay pride

Gay pride or LGBT pride is the positive stance against discrimination and violence toward lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people to promote their self-affirmation, dignity, equality rights, increase their visibility as a social group, build community, and celebrate sexual diversity and gender variance.

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Genevieve (film)

Genevieve is a 1953 British comedy film produced and directed by Henry Cornelius and written by William Rose.

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Geographical indications and traditional specialities in the European Union

Three European Union schemes of geographical indications and traditional specialties, known as protected designation of origin (PDO), protected geographical indication (PGI), and traditional specialities guaranteed (TSG), promote and protect names of quality agricultural products and foodstuffs.

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Geography of Sussex

Sussex is a historic county and cultural region in the south of England corresponding roughly in area to the ancient Kingdom of Sussex.

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George Albert Smith (film pioneer)

George Albert Smith (4 January 1864 – 17 May 1959) was an English stage hypnotist, psychic, magic lantern lecturer, Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society, inventor and a key member of the loose association of early film pioneers dubbed the Brighton School by French film historian Georges Sadoul.

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George Butterworth

George Sainton Kaye Butterworth, MC (12 July 18855 August 1916) was an English composer who was best known for the orchestral idyll The Banks of Green Willow and his song settings of A. E. Housman's poems from A Shropshire Lad.

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George Smith (artist)

George Smith (1713/14 – 7 September 1776) was an English landscape painter and poet, known as "George Smith of Chichester".

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George Wyndham, 3rd Earl of Egremont

George O'Brien Wyndham, 3rd Earl of Egremont FRS (18 December 1751 – 11 November 1837) of Petworth House in Sussex and Orchard Wyndham in Somerset, was a British peer, a major landowner and a great art collector.

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Germanic peoples

The Germanic peoples (also called Teutonic, Suebian, or Gothic in older literature) are an Indo-European ethno-linguistic group of Northern European origin.

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Gideon Mantell

Gideon Algernon Mantell MRCS FRS (3 February 1790 – 10 November 1852) was an English obstetrician, geologist and palaeontologist.

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Gladiator (2000 film)

Gladiator is a 2000 epic historical drama film directed by Ridley Scott and written by David Franzoni, John Logan, and William Nicholson.

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Glyndebourne

Glyndebourne is an English country house, the site of an opera house that, since 1934, has been the venue for the annual Glyndebourne Festival Opera.

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Goodwood House

Goodwood House is a country house and estate of covering in Westhampnett, Chichester, West Sussex, England.

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Goodwood Racecourse

Goodwood Racecourse is a horse-racing track five miles north of Chichester, West Sussex, in England controlled by the family of the Duke of Richmond, whose seat is nearby Goodwood House.

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Gorboduc (play)

The Tragedie of Gorboduc, also titled Ferrex and Porrex, is an English play from 1561.

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Graham Cutts

John Henry Graham Cutts (1884 – 7 February 1958), known as Graham Cutts, was a British film director, one of the leading British directors in the 1920s.

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Granny Smith

The Granny Smith is a tip-bearing apple cultivar, which originated in Australia in 1868.

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Hall house

The hall house is a type of vernacular house traditional in many parts of England, Wales, Ireland and lowland Scotland, as well as northern Europe, during the Middle Ages, centring on a hall.

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Hammond Innes

Ralph Hammond Innes, CBE (15 July 1913 – 10 June 1998) was a British novelist who wrote over 30 novels, as well as children's and travel books.

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Harold Pinter

Harold Pinter (10 October 1930 – 24 December 2008) was a Nobel Prize-winning British playwright, screenwriter, director and actor.

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Harry Enfield

Henry Richard Enfield (born 30 May 1961) is an English comedian, actor, writer, and director.

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Harry Enfield's Television Programme

Harry Enfield and Chums (also called Harry Enfield's Television Programme) is a British sketch show starring Harry Enfield and Paul Whitehouse.

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Harry Kroto

Sir Harold Walter Kroto (born Harold Walter Krotoschiner; 7 October 1939 – 30 April 2016), known as Harry Kroto, was an English chemist.

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Harting

Harting is a civil parish in the Chichester District of West Sussex, England.

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Harveys Brewery

Harvey's Brewery is a brewery in Lewes, East Sussex, England.

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Hastings

Hastings is a town and borough in East Sussex on the south coast of England, east of the county town of Lewes and south east of London.

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Hastings Castle

Hastings Castle is a keep and bailey castle ruin situated in the town of Hastings, East Sussex.

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Hastings Pier

Hastings Pier is a pleasure pier in Hastings, East Sussex, England.

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Henri Gaudier-Brzeska

Henri Gaudier-Brzeska (4 October 1891 – 5 June 1915) was a French artist and sculptor who developed a rough-hewn, primitive style of direct carving.

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Henry Burstow

Henry Burstow (1826–1916) was a shoemaker and bellringer from Horsham, Sussex, best known for his vast repertoire of songs, many of which were collected in the folksong revival of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

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Henry James

Henry James, OM (–) was an American author regarded as a key transitional figure between literary realism and literary modernism, and is considered by many to be among the greatest novelists in the English language.

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Henry Moore

Henry Spencer Moore (30 July 1898 – 31 August 1986) was an English artist.

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Herstmonceux Castle

Herstmonceux Castle is a brick-built castle, dating from the 15th century, near Herstmonceux, East Sussex, England.

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Hilaire Belloc

Joseph Hilaire Pierre René Belloc (27 July 187016 July 1953) was an Anglo-French writer and historian.

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History of Sussex

Sussex, from the Old English 'Sūþsēaxe' ('South Saxons'), is a historic county in the south east of England.

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Horsham

Horsham is a market town on the upper reaches of the River Arun on the fringe of the Weald in West Sussex, England.

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Hot pot

Hot pot is a Chinese cooking method, prepared with a simmering pot of soup stock at the dining table, containing a variety of East Asian foodstuffs and ingredients.

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Hubert Parry

Sir Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, 1st Baronet (27 February 18487 October 1918) was an English composer, teacher and historian of music.

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Human behavior

Human behavior is the responses of individuals or groups of humans to internal and external stimuli.

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Ian Nairn

Ian Douglas Nairn (24 August 1930 – 14 August 1983) was a British architectural critic who coined the word ‘Subtopia’ to indicate drab suburbs that look identical through unimaginative town-planning.

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Iguanodon

Iguanodon (meaning "iguana-tooth") is a genus of ornithopod dinosaur that existed roughly halfway between the first of the swift bipedal hypsilophodontids of the mid-Jurassic and the duck-billed dinosaurs of the late Cretaceous.

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Indo-Saracenic Revival architecture

Indo-Saracenic Revival (also known as Indo-Gothic, Mughal-Gothic, Neo-Mughal, Hindoo style) was an architectural style mostly used by British architects in India in the later 19th century, especially in public and government buildings in the British Raj, and the palaces of rulers of the princely states.

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International Mathematical Union

The International Mathematical Union (IMU) is an international non-governmental organization devoted to international cooperation in the field of mathematics across the world.

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International Prize (Fyssen Foundation)

The International Prize (French: Prix International) of the Fyssen Foundation is a science award that has been given annually since 1980 to a scientist who has conducted distinguished research in the areas supported by the foundation such as ethology, palaeontology, archaeology, anthropology, psychology, epistemology, logic and the neurosciences.

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International Style (architecture)

The International Style is the name of a major architectural style that developed in the 1920s and 1930s and strongly related to Modernism and Modern architecture.

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Isaac Newton Telescope

The Isaac Newton Telescope or INT is a 2.54 m (100 in.) optical telescope run by the Isaac Newton Group of Telescopes at Roque de los Muchachos Observatory on La Palma in the Canary Islands since 1984.

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Isle of Wight

The Isle of Wight (also referred to informally as The Island or abbreviated to IOW) is a county and the largest and second-most populous island in England.

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Isotope

Isotopes are variants of a particular chemical element which differ in neutron number.

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J. M. W. Turner

Joseph Mallord William Turner (23 April 177519 December 1851), known as J. M. W. Turner and contemporarily as William Turner, was an English Romantic painter, printmaker and watercolourist, known for his expressive colourisation, imaginative landscapes and turbulent, often violent marine paintings.

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Jack Clayton

Jack Clayton (1 March 1921 – 26 February 1995) was a British film director and producer, who specialised in bringing literary works to the screen.

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James Bachman

James Hamilton Bachman (born 24 February 1972) is an English comedian, actor and writer.

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James Hannington

James Hannington (3 September 1847 – 29 October 1885) was an English Anglican missionary, saint and martyr.

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James Williamson (film pioneer)

James A. Williamson (8 November 1855 – 18 August 1933) was a Scottish photographer and a key member of the loose association of early film pioneers dubbed the Brighton School by French film historian Georges Sadoul.

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Jane Postlethwaite

Jane Postlethwaite is an English performer, artist, character comedian, writer and actress.

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Jean Dubuffet

Jean Philippe Arthur Dubuffet (31 July 1901 – 12 May 1985) was a French painter and sculptor.

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Joan Morgan

Joan Morgan (1 February 1905 – 22 July 2004) was an English film actress, screenwriter and novelist.

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Johann Rahn

Johann Rahn (Latinised form Rhonius) (10 March 1622 – 25 May 1676) was a Swiss mathematician who is credited with the first use of the division symbol, ÷ (obelus) and the therefore sign, ∴. The symbols were used in Teutsche Algebra, published in 1659.

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John Braxton Hicks

John Braxton Hicks (23 February 1823 – 28 August 1897) was a 19th-century English doctor who specialised in obstetrics.

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John Constable

John Constable, (11 June 1776 – 31 March 1837) was an English landscape painter in the naturalistic tradition.

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John Cowper Powys

John Cowper Powys (8 October 187217 June 1963) was a British philosopher, lecturer, novelist, literary critic, and poet.

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John Fletcher (playwright)

John Fletcher (1579–1625) was a Jacobean playwright.

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John Ireland (composer)

John Nicholson Ireland (13 August 187912 June 1962) was an English composer and teacher of music.

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John Maynard Keynes

John Maynard Keynes, 1st Baron Keynes (5 June 1883 – 21 April 1946), was a British economist whose ideas fundamentally changed the theory and practice of macroeconomics and the economic policies of governments.

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John Pell

John Pell (1 March 1611 – 12 December 1685) was an English mathematician and political agent abroad.

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John Skelton (sculptor)

John Stephen Skelton MBE (1923–1999) was a British letter-cutter and sculptor.

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Jubilee Library, Brighton

Jubilee Library is the main public library serving the English city of Brighton and Hove.

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Kate Lee (English singer)

Kate Lee, born Catharine Anna Spooner, (9 March 1858 – 25 July 1904) was a singer and folksong collector.

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Katie Johnson (English actress)

Bessie Kate "Katie" Johnson (18 November 1878 in Clayton, Sussex – 4 May 1957 in Elham, Kent) was an English actress who appeared on stage from 1894http://www.screenonline.org.uk/people/id/557746/index.htmlJohnson on the British Film Institute website and on screen from the 1930s to the 1950s.

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Keane (band)

Keane are an English rock band from Battle, East Sussex, formed in 1995.

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Kent

Kent is a county in South East England and one of the home counties.

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Kevin the Teenager

Kevin Patterson is a character created and played by the British comedian, Harry Enfield.

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Keynesian economics

Keynesian economics (sometimes called Keynesianism) are the various macroeconomic theories about how in the short run – and especially during recessions – economic output is strongly influenced by aggregate demand (total demand in the economy).

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Kingdom of Sussex

The kingdom of the South Saxons (Suþseaxna rice), today referred to as the Kingdom of Sussex, was one of the seven traditional kingdoms of the Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy.

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Kirsten Cooke

Kirsten Cooke (born 4 October 1952, in Cuckfield, West Sussex, England) is an English stage actress who trained at the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art, London.

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Knepp Castle

The medieval Knepp Castle is to the west of the village of West Grinstead, West Sussex, England near the River Adur and the A24.

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Knobby Russet

The Knobby Russet, also known as Knobbed Russet, Winter Russet, Old Maids, and Winter Apple, is a large green and yellow apple cultivar with a rough and black russet and unusually irregular, warty and knobbly surface.

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Knucker

Knucker is a dialect word for a kind of water dragon, living in knuckerholes in Sussex, England.

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La mer (Debussy)

La mer, trois esquisses symphoniques pour orchestre (French for The sea, three symphonic sketches for orchestra), or simply La mer (i.e. The Sea), L. 109, is an orchestral composition by the French composer Claude Debussy.

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Lamb House

Lamb House is an 18th-century house situated in Rye, East Sussex, England, and in the ownership of the National Trust.

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Laurence Olivier

Laurence Kerr Olivier, Baron Olivier, (22 May 1907 – 11 July 1989) was an English actor and director who, along with his contemporaries Ralph Richardson and John Gielgud, dominated the British stage of the mid-20th century.

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László Moholy-Nagy

László Moholy-Nagy (born László Weisz; July 20, 1895 – November 24, 1946) was a Hungarian painter and photographer as well as a professor in the Bauhaus school.

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Lee Miller

Elizabeth "Lee" Miller, Lady Penrose (April 23, 1907 – July 21, 1977), was an American photographer and photojournalist.

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Leo Sayer

Leo Sayer (born Gerard Hugh Sayer, 21 May 1948) is a British born singer-songwriter musician and entertainer whose singing career has spanned four decades.

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Leofwynn

Leofwynn of Bishopstone also known as Lewinna or Leofwynn, was a 7th-century female saint of Anglo-Saxon England, floruit 664–673 AD.

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Leonard of Noblac

Leonard of Noblac (or of Limoges or Noblet; also known as Lienard, Linhart, Leonhard, Léonard, Leonardo, Annard) (died 559 AD), is a Frankish saint closely associated with the town and abbey of Saint-Léonard-de-Noblat, in Haute-Vienne, in the Limousin (region) of France.

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Leonard Woolf

Leonard Sidney Woolf (25 November 1880 – 14 August 1969) was a British political theorist, author, publisher and civil servant, and husband of author Virginia Woolf.

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Lesley Manville

Lesley Ann Manville (born 12 March 1956) is an English actress, known for her frequent collaborations with director Mike Leigh, winning the London Film Critics Circle Award for British Actress of the Year for Leigh's All or Nothing (2002) and Another Year (2010), and the National Board of Review Award for Best Actress for the latter film.

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Levellers (band)

Levellers are an English folk rock band formed in Brighton, England in 1988, consisting of Mark Chadwick (guitar and vocals), Jeremy Cunningham (bass guitar), Charlie Heather (drums), Jon Sevink (violin), Simon Friend (guitar) and Matt Savage (keyboards).

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Lewes

Lewes is the county town of East Sussex and formerly all of Sussex.

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Lewes Castle

Lewes Castle stands at the highest point of Lewes, East Sussex, England, on an artificial mound constructed with chalk blocks.

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Lewes Priory

Lewes Priory is a demolished medieval Cluniac priory in Southover, East Sussex in the United Kingdom.

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Lily of the valley

Lily of the valley (Convallaria majalis), sometimes written lily-of-the-valley, is a sweetly scented, highly poisonous woodland flowering plant that is native throughout the cool temperate Northern Hemisphere in Asia and Europe.

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List of Protestant martyrs of the English Reformation

Protestants were executed under heresy laws during persecutions against Protestant religious reformers for their religious denomination during the reigns of Henry VIII (1509–1547) and Mary I of England (1553–1558).

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Littlehampton

Littlehampton is a seaside resort and pleasure harbour, and the most populous civil parish in the Arun District of West Sussex, England.

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Lobsters (1936 film)

Lobsters is a British documentary film made in 1935 and released in 1936 about lobster fishermen in the port of Littlehampton in Sussex, England and is one of the first aquatic films ever made.

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Long Man of Wilmington

The Long Man of Wilmington or Wilmington Giant is a hill figure on the steep slopes of Windover Hill near Wilmington, East Sussex, England.

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Lucy Broadwood

Lucy Etheldred Broadwood (9 August 1858 – 22 August 1929) was an English folksong collector and researcher during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

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Lyminster

Lyminster is a village that is the main settlement of Lyminster and Crossbush civil parish, in the Arun District of West Sussex, England.

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Lytton Strachey

Giles Lytton Strachey (1 March 1880 – 21 January 1932) was an English writer and critic.

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Mad Jack Fuller

John Fuller (20 February 1757 – 11 April 1834), better known as "Mad Jack" Fuller (although he himself preferred to be called "Honest John" Fuller), was Squire of the hamlet of Brightling, in Sussex, and politician who sat in the House of Commons between 1780 and 1812.

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Madeline Smith

Madeline Smith (born 2 August 1949) is an English actress.

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Man Ray

Man Ray (born Emmanuel Radnitzky; August 27, 1890 – November 18, 1976) was an American visual artist who spent most of his career in France.

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Manning Haynes

Horace Manning Haynes (born: Lyminster, Sussex – died 3 March 1957, Epsom, England) (often credited as H. Manning Haynes) was a British-born film director and actor.

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Maria Ann Smith

Maria Ann "Granny" Smith (1799 – 9 March 1870) was a British-Australian orchardist responsible for the cultivation of the Granny Smith apple.

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Martin Ryle

Sir Martin Ryle (27 September 1918 – 14 October 1984) was an English radio astronomer who developed revolutionary radio telescope systems (see e.g. aperture synthesis) and used them for accurate location and imaging of weak radio sources.

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Mathematical tile

Mathematical tiles are a building material used extensively in the southeastern counties of England—especially East Sussex and Kent—in the 18th and early 19th centuries.

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Maureen Duffy

Maureen Patricia Duffy (born 21 October 1933) is a British poet, playwright, novelist and non-fiction author.

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Max Ernst

Max Ernst (2 April 1891 – 1 April 1976) was a German painter, sculptor, graphic artist, and poet.

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Max Miller (comedian)

Thomas Henry Sargent (21 November 1894 – 7 May 1963), best known by his stage name Max Miller and also known as "The Cheeky Chappie", was an English comedian who was widely regarded as the greatest stand-up comedian of his generation.

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Mayfield and Five Ashes

Mayfield and Five Ashes is a civil parish in the High Weald of East Sussex, England.

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Men Behaving Badly

Men Behaving Badly is a British sitcom that was created and written by Simon Nye.

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Michael Drayton

Michael Drayton (1563 – 23 December 1631) was an English poet who came to prominence in the Elizabethan era.

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Midhurst

Midhurst (pronounced, or in the Sussex dialect: Medhas) is a market town and civil parish in West Sussex, England.

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Modernism

Modernism is a philosophical movement that, along with cultural trends and changes, arose from wide-scale and far-reaching transformations in Western society during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

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Monk's House

Monk's House is an 18th-century weatherboarded cottage in the village of Rodmell, three miles (4.8km) south-east of Lewes, East Sussex, England.

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Mosaic

A mosaic is a piece of art or image made from the assemblage of small pieces of colored glass, stone, or other materials.

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Mount Caburn

Mount Caburn is a 480-foot (146m) prominent landmark in East Sussex, England, about one mile (1.6 km) east of Lewes overlooking the village of Glynde.

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Mr. Bean

Mr.

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Mr. Turner

Mr.

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Mumford–Shah functional

The Mumford–Shah functional is a functional that is used to establish an optimality criterion for segmenting an image into sub-regions.

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Mural

A mural is any piece of artwork painted or applied directly on a wall, ceiling or other permanent surface.

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Music of Sussex

The historic county of Sussex in southern England has a rich musical heritage that encompasses the genres of folk, classical and rock and popular music amongst others.

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My Boy Jack (film)

My Boy Jack is a 2007 British biographical television film based on David Haig's 1997 play of the same name.

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Naiad

In Greek mythology, the Naiads (Greek: Ναϊάδες) are a type of female spirit, or nymph, presiding over fountains, wells, springs, streams, brooks and other bodies of fresh water.

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National Medal of Science

The National Medal of Science is an honor bestowed by the President of the United States to individuals in science and engineering who have made important contributions to the advancement of knowledge in the fields of behavioral and social sciences, biology, chemistry, engineering, mathematics and physics.

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National Velvet (film)

National Velvet is a 1944 American Technicolor sports film directed by Clarence Brown and based on the novel of the same name by Enid Bagnold, published in 1935.

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Neolithic

The Neolithic was a period in the development of human technology, beginning about 10,200 BC, according to the ASPRO chronology, in some parts of Western Asia, and later in other parts of the world and ending between 4500 and 2000 BC.

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Nick Cave

Nicholas Edward Cave (born 22 September 1957) is an Australian musician, singer-songwriter, author, screenwriter, composer and occasional film actor, best known as the frontman of the rock band Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds.

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Nobel Prize in Chemistry

The Nobel Prize in Chemistry (Nobelpriset i kemi) is awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences to scientists in the various fields of chemistry.

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Nobel Prize in Physics

The Nobel Prize in Physics (Nobelpriset i fysik) is a yearly award given by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences for those who conferred the most outstanding contributions for mankind in the field of physics.

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Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine

The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (Nobelpriset i fysiologi eller medicin), administered by the Nobel Foundation, is awarded once a year for outstanding discoveries in the fields of life sciences and medicine.

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Ogee

An ogee is a curve (often used in moulding), shaped somewhat like an S, consisting of two arcs that curve in opposite senses, so that the ends are parallel.

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Oh! What a Lovely War

Oh! What a Lovely War is a 1969 British comedy musical film directed by Richard Attenborough (in his directorial debut), with an ensemble cast including Maggie Smith, Dirk Bogarde, John Gielgud, John Mills, Kenneth More, Laurence Olivier, Jack Hawkins, Corin Redgrave, Michael Redgrave, Vanessa Redgrave, Ralph Richardson, Ian Holm, Paul Shelley, Malcolm McFee, Jean-Pierre Cassel, Nanette Newman, Edward Fox, Susannah York, John Clements, Phyllis Calvert and Maurice Roëves.

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One More Time with Feeling

One More Time with Feeling is a 2016 British documentary film directed by Andrew Dominik.

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Oral tradition

Oral tradition, or oral lore, is a form of human communication where in knowledge, art, ideas and cultural material is received, preserved and transmitted orally from one generation to another.

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Orangutan

The orangutans (also spelled orang-utan, orangutang, or orang-utang) are three extant species of great apes native to Indonesia and Malaysia.

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Pablo Picasso

Pablo Ruiz Picasso (25 October 1881 – 8 April 1973) was a Spanish painter, sculptor, printmaker, ceramicist, stage designer, poet and playwright who spent most of his adult life in France.

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Pallant House Gallery

Pallant House Gallery is an art gallery in Chichester, West Sussex, England.

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Parham Park

Parham Park is an Elizabethan house and estate in the civil parish of Parham, west of the village of Cootham, and between Storrington and Pulborough, West Sussex, South East England.

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Passenger (singer)

Michael David Rosenberg (born 17 May 1984), better known by his stage name Passenger, is an English singer-songwriter and musician.

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Patagonia

Patagonia is a sparsely populated region located at the southern end of South America, shared by Argentina and Chile.

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Patron saint

A patron saint, patroness saint, patron hallow or heavenly protector is a saint who in Roman Catholicism, Anglicanism, Eastern Orthodoxy, or particular branches of Islam, is regarded as the heavenly advocate of a nation, place, craft, activity, class, clan, family or person.

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Paul Nash (artist)

Paul Nash (11 May 1889 – 11 July 1946) was a British surrealist painter and war artist, as well as a photographer, writer and designer of applied art.

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Paul Putner

Paul Putner is an English comedian and actor.

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Pell number

In mathematics, the Pell numbers are an infinite sequence of integers, known since ancient times, that comprise the denominators of the closest rational approximations to the square root of 2.

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Pell's equation

Pell's equation (also called the Pell–Fermat equation) is any Diophantine equation of the form where n is a given positive nonsquare integer and integer solutions are sought for x and y. In Cartesian coordinates, the equation has the form of a hyperbola; solutions occur wherever the curve passes through a point whose x and y coordinates are both integers, such as the trivial solution with x.

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Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania (Pennsylvania German: Pennsylvaani or Pennsilfaani), officially the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, is a state located in the northeastern and Mid-Atlantic regions of the United States.

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Percy Bysshe Shelley

Percy Bysshe Shelley (4 August 17928 July 1822) was one of the major English Romantic poets, and is regarded by some as among the finest lyric and philosophical poets in the English language, and one of the most influential.

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Pete McCarthy

Peter Charles McCarthy Robinson (9 November 1951 – 6 October 2004), known as Pete McCarthy, was an English comedian, radio and television presenter and travel writer.

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Pete Walker (director)

Pete Walker (born 4 July 1939) is an English film director, writer and producer, specialising in horror and sexploitation films, frequently combining the two.

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Peter Randall-Page

Peter Randall-Page RA (born 1954) is a British artist and sculptor.

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Petersfield

Petersfield is a market town and civil parish in the East Hampshire district of Hampshire, England.

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Petworth

Petworth is a small town and civil parish in the Chichester District of West Sussex, England.

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Petworth House

Petworth House in the parish of Petworth, West Sussex, England, is a late 17th-century Grade I listed country house, rebuilt in 1688 by Charles Seymour, 6th Duke of Somerset, and altered in the 1870s to the design of the architect Anthony Salvin.

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Pevensey Castle

Pevensey Castle is a medieval castle and former Roman Saxon Shore fort at Pevensey in the English county of East Sussex.

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Philip Howard, 20th Earl of Arundel

Saint Philip Howard, 1st Earl of Arundel (28 June 1557 – 19 October 1595) was an English nobleman.

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Philip Jackson (sculptor)

Philip Henry Christopher Jackson CVO DL (born 18 April 1944) is an award-winning Scottish sculptor, noted for his modern style and emphasis on form.

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Phun City

Phun City was a rock festival held at Ecclesden Common near Worthing, England from July 24 to July 26, 1970.

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Piltdown Man

The Piltdown Man was a paleoanthropological hoax in which bone fragments were presented as the fossilised remains of a previously unknown early human.

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Plumpton Racecourse

Plumpton Racecourse is a National Hunt (jumping) horse-racing course at the village of Plumpton, East Sussex near Lewes and Brighton.

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Plumpton, East Sussex

Plumpton is a village and civil parish in the Lewes District of East Sussex, England.

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Poly-Olbion

The Poly-Olbion is a topographical poem describing England and Wales.

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Popular music

Popular music is music with wide appeal that is typically distributed to large audiences through the music industry.

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Pride parade

Pride parades (also known as pride marches, pride events, and pride festivals) are events celebrating lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex (LGBTI) culture and pride.

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Puck of Pook's Hill

Puck of Pook's Hill is a fantasy book by Rudyard Kipling, published in 1906, containing a series of short stories set in different periods of English history.

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Quadrophenia (film)

Quadrophenia is a 1979 British drama film, loosely based on The Who's 1973 rock opera of the same name.

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Quakers

Quakers (or Friends) are members of a historically Christian group of religious movements formally known as the Religious Society of Friends or Friends Church.

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Quarter session

The courts of quarter sessions or quarter sessions were local courts traditionally held at four set times each year in the Kingdom of England (including Wales) from 1388 until 1707, then in 18th-century Great Britain, in the later United Kingdom, and in other dominions of the British Empire.

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Radioactive decay

Radioactive decay (also known as nuclear decay or radioactivity) is the process by which an unstable atomic nucleus loses energy (in terms of mass in its rest frame) by emitting radiation, such as an alpha particle, beta particle with neutrino or only a neutrino in the case of electron capture, gamma ray, or electron in the case of internal conversion.

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Rag'n'Bone Man

Rory Charles Graham (born 29 January 1985), better known as Rag'n'Bone Man, is an English singer and songwriter, known for his deep, bass-baritone voice.

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Ralph Richardson

Sir Ralph David Richardson (19 December 1902 – 10 October 1983) was an English actor who, along with his contemporaries John Gielgud and Laurence Olivier, dominated the British stage of the mid-20th century.

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Ralph Vaughan Williams

Ralph Vaughan Williams (12 October 1872– 26 August 1958) was an English composer.

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Renaissance

The Renaissance is a period in European history, covering the span between the 14th and 17th centuries.

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René Magritte

René François Ghislain Magritte (21 November 1898 – 15 August 1967) was a Belgian surrealist artist.

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Rewards and Fairies

Rewards and Fairies is a historical fantasy book by Rudyard Kipling published in 1910.

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Rice University

William Marsh Rice University, commonly known as Rice University, is a private research university located on a 300-acre (121 ha) campus in Houston, Texas, United States.

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Richard of Chichester

Richard of Chichester (1197 – 3 April 1253), also known as Richard de Wych, is a saint (canonized 1262) who was Bishop of Chichester.

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Richard Smalley

Richard Errett Smalley (June 6, 1943 – October 28, 2005) was the Gene and Norman Hackerman Professor of Chemistry and a Professor of Physics and Astronomy at Rice University, in Houston, Texas.

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Rizzle Kicks

Rizzle Kicks are a British hip hop duo from Brighton, consisting of Jordan "Rizzle" Stephens (born 25 January 1992) and Harley "Kicks" Alexander-Sule (born 23 November 1991).

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Robert Curl

Robert Floyd Curl Jr. (born August 23, 1933) is a University Professor Emeritus, Pitzer–Schlumberger Professor of Natural Sciences Emeritus, and Professor of Chemistry Emeritus at Rice University.

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Robertsbridge

Robertsbridge is a village in East Sussex, England within the civil parish of Salehurst and Robertsbridge.

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Robin Driscoll

Robin Driscoll is a British actor and writer, best known as a writer of Mr. Bean.

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Rodmell

Rodmell is a small village and civil parish in the Lewes District of East Sussex, England.

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Roger Fry

Roger Eliot Fry (14 December 1866 – 9 September 1934) was an English painter and critic, and a member of the Bloomsbury Group.

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Roland Penrose

Sir Roland Algernon Penrose CBE (14 October 1900 – 23 April 1984) was an English artist, historian and poet.

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Roman Catholic Bishop of Arundel and Brighton

The Bishop of Arundel and Brighton is the ordinary of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Arundel and Brighton in the Province of Southwark, England.

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Roman mosaic

A Roman mosaic is a mosaic made during the Roman period, throughout the Roman Republic and later Empire.

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Romantic poetry

Romantic poetry is the poetry of the Romantic era, an artistic, literary, musical and intellectual movement that originated in Europe toward the end of the 18th century.

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Romesh Ranganathan

Jonathan Romesh Ranganathan (born January 30, 1978) is a British stand-up comedian and actor.

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Rottingdean

Rottingdean is a coastal village next to the town of Brighton and within the city of Brighton and Hove, in East Sussex, on the south coast of England.

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Royal Blood (band)

Royal Blood are an English rock duo formed in Brighton in 2013.

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Royal Institute of British Architects

The Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) is a professional body for architects primarily in the United Kingdom, but also internationally, founded for the advancement of architecture under its charter granted in 1837 and Supplemental Charter granted in 1971.

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Royal Observatory, Greenwich

The Royal Observatory, Greenwich (ROG; known as the Old Royal Observatory from 1957 to 1998, when the working Royal Greenwich Observatory, RGO, moved from Greenwich to Herstmonceux) is an observatory situated on a hill in Greenwich Park, overlooking the River Thames.

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Royal Pavilion

The Royal Pavilion, also known as the Brighton Pavilion, is a Grade I listed former royal residence located in Brighton, England.

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Rudyard Kipling

Joseph Rudyard Kipling (30 December 1865 – 18 January 1936)The Times, (London) 18 January 1936, p. 12 was an English journalist, short-story writer, poet, and novelist.

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Rumer Godden

Margaret Rumer Godden OBE (10 December 1907 – 8 November 1998) was an English author of more than 60 fiction and nonfiction books written under the name of Rumer Godden.

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Rye

Rye (Secale cereale) is a grass grown extensively as a grain, a cover crop and a forage crop.

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Saint Hill Manor

Saint Hill Manor is a Grade II listed country manor house at Saint Hill Green, near East Grinstead in West Sussex, England.

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Salvador Dalí

Salvador Domingo Felipe Jacinto Dalí i Domènech, 1st Marquess of Dalí de Púbol (11 May 190423 January 1989), known professionally as Salvador Dalí, was a prominent Spanish surrealist born in Figueres, Catalonia, Spain.

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Samuel Hieronymus Grimm

Samuel Hieronymus Grimm (January 18, 1733 – April 14, 1794)The Gentleman's Magazine, 1794, p399 was an 18th-century Swiss landscape artist who worked in oils (until 1764), watercolours, and pen and ink media.

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Sandstone

Sandstone is a clastic sedimentary rock composed mainly of sand-sized (0.0625 to 2 mm) mineral particles or rock fragments.

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Scan Tester

Lewis "Scan" Tester (7 September 1886 – 1972) was an English folk and English country musician.

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Sea serpent

A sea serpent or sea dragon is a type of dragon described in various mythologies, most notably Greek (Cetus, Echidna, Hydra, Scylla), Mesopotamian (Tiamat), Hebrew (Leviathan), and Norse (Jörmungandr).

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Sean Ellis

Sean Ellis (born 1970) is a British film director, writer, producer and fashion photographer.

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Selsey Abbey

Selsey Abbey was founded by St Wilfrid in AD 681 on land donated at Selsey by the local Anglo-Saxon ruler, King Æðelwealh of Sussex, Sussex's first Christian king.

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Shadowlands (1993 film)

Shadowlands is a 1993 British biographical drama film about the relationship between Irish academic C. S. Lewis and American poet Joy Davidman, her death from cancer, and how this challenged Lewis's Christian faith.

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Sheila Kaye-Smith

Sheila Kaye-Smith (4 February 1887 – 14 January 1956) was an English writer, known for her many novels set in the borderlands of Sussex and Kent in the English regional tradition.

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Shipley, West Sussex

Shipley is a village and civil parish in the Horsham District of West Sussex, England.

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Shirley Collins

Shirley Elizabeth Collins MBE (born 5 July 1935) is an English folk singer who was a significant contributor to the English Folk Revival of the 1960s and 1970s.

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Shoreham-by-Sea

Shoreham-by-Sea (often shortened to Shoreham) is a seaside town and port in West Sussex, England.

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Sidney Morgan

Sidney Morgan (2 August 1874 – 11 June 1946) was an English film director, screenwriter, producer and actor.

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Simon Evans

Simon Evans (born 9 May 1965) is an English comedian, born in Luton and now living in Hove.

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Simon Nye

Simon Nye (born 29 July 1958 in Burgess Hill, Sussex) is an English comic television writer, best known for creating the hit sitcom Men Behaving Badly, writing all of the four ITV Pantos, co-writing the 2006 film Flushed Away, co-writing Reggie Perrin and creating the latest adaption of the Just William in the same-name CBBC series of 2010.

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Sir William Burrell, 2nd Baronet

Sir William Burrell (10 October 1732 – 20 January 1796) was an English antiquarian.

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Slindon

Slindon is a mostly rural village and civil parish in the Arun District of West Sussex, England, containing a developed nucleus amid woodland.

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Slindon Cricket Club

Slindon Cricket Club was famous in the middle part of the 18th century when it claimed to have the best team in England.

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Smashie and Nicey

Mike Smash and Dave Nice were two fictional television characters who first appeared in the early 1990s TV sketch show Harry Enfield's Television Programme.

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Social science

Social science is a major category of academic disciplines, concerned with society and the relationships among individuals within a society.

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Society of Dependants

The Society of Dependants were a Christian sect founded by John Sirgood in the mid nineteenth century.

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South Harting

South Harting is a village within Harting civil parish in the Chichester district of West Sussex, England.

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South-up map orientation

South-up map orientation is the orientation of a map with south up, or at the top of the map, amounting to a 180-degree rotation of the map from the standard convention of north-up.

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Southern Combination Football League

The Macron Southern Combination Football League is a football league broadly covering the counties of East Sussex, West Sussex and southeastern Surrey, England.

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St Botolph's Church, Hardham

St Botolph's Church is the Church of England parish church of Hardham, West Sussex.

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St Hugh's Charterhouse, Parkminster

St Hugh's Charterhouse, Parkminster is the only post-Reformation Carthusian monastery in the United Kingdom.

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St John the Baptist's Church, Clayton

St John the Baptist's Church is the Church of England parish church of the village of Clayton in the district of Mid Sussex, one of seven local government districts in the English county of West Sussex.

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St Leonard's Forest

St.

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St Leonards-on-Sea

St Leonards-on-Sea (commonly known as St Leonards) has been part of Hastings, East Sussex, England, since the late 19th century though it retains a sense of separate identity.

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Stane Street (Chichester)

Stane Street is the modern name given to an important Roman road in England that linked London to the Roman town of Noviomagus Reginorum, or Regnentium, later renamed Chichester by the Saxons.

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Stella Gibbons

Stella Dorothea Gibbons (5 January 1902 – 19 December 1989) was an English author, journalist, and poet.

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Stephen Grant (comedian)

Stephen Grant (born 2 July 1973 in Brighton) is a British comedian, comedy writer, and radio presenter.

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Stirling Prize

The Royal Institute of British Architects Stirling Prize is a British prize for excellence in architecture.

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Stomp (theatrical show)

Stomp is a percussion group, originating in Brighton, United Kingdom that uses the body and ordinary objects to create a physical theatre performance using rhythms, acrobatics and pantomime.

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Stoolball

Stoolball is a sport that dates back to at least the 15th century, originating in Sussex, southern England.

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Streat

Streat is a village in the Lewes district of East Sussex, England, south-east of Burgess Hill and west of Lewes, close to remnant foothills just north of the South Downs National Park.

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Surrealism

Surrealism is a cultural movement that began in the early 1920s, and is best known for its visual artworks and writings.

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Sussex

Sussex, from the Old English Sūþsēaxe (South Saxons), is a historic county in South East England corresponding roughly in area to the ancient Kingdom of Sussex.

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Sussex Bonfire Societies

The Sussex Bonfire Societies are responsible for the series of bonfire festivals concentrated on central and eastern Sussex, with further festivals in parts of Surrey and Kent from September to November each year.

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Sussex by the Sea

"Sussex by the Sea" (also known as "A Horse Galloping") is a patriotic song written in 1907 by William Ward-Higgs, often considered to be the unofficial county anthem of Sussex.

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Sussex County Cricket Club

Sussex County Cricket Club is the oldest of eighteen first-class county clubs within the domestic cricket structure of England and Wales.

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Sussex County Football Association

The Sussex County Football Association, also simply known as Sussex County FA or Sussex FA, is the governing body of football in the county of Sussex, England.

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Sussex Day

Sussex Day is the county day for the historic county of Sussex in southern England and is celebrated on 16 June each year to celebrate the rich heritage and culture of Sussex.

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Sussex pond pudding

Sussex pond pudding, or well pudding, is a traditional English pudding from the southern county of Sussex.

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Sussex wine

Sussex wine is wine produced in the historic county of Sussex in England, a region divided for administrative purposes into East Sussex and West Sussex.

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Symbol

A symbol is a mark, sign or word that indicates, signifies, or is understood as representing an idea, object, or relationship.

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T. S. Eliot

Thomas Stearns Eliot, (26 September 1888 – 4 January 1965), was an essayist, publisher, playwright, literary and social critic, and "one of the twentieth century's major poets".

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Tapsel gate

A Tapsel gate is a type of wooden gate, unique to the English county of Sussex, which has a central pivot upon which it can rotate through 90° in either direction before coming to a stop at two fixed points.

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Tarring, West Sussex

West Tarring is a neighbourhood of the Borough of Worthing in West Sussex, England.

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Tehuelche people

The Aónikenk people, better known by the exonym Tehuelche, are a group of indigenous peoples of Patagonia and the southern pampas regions of Argentina and Chile.

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Test cricket

Test cricket is the longest form of the sport of cricket and is considered its highest standard.

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Thakeham

Thakeham is a village and civil parish in the Horsham District of West Sussex, England.

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The 39 Steps (1935 film)

The 39 Steps is a 1935 British thriller film directed by Alfred Hitchcock and starring Robert Donat and Madeleine Carroll.

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The Ballad of Shirley Collins

The Ballad of Shirley Collins is a 2017 British feature documentary directed by Rob Curry and Tim Plester.

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The Chalk Garden (film)

The Chalk Garden is a 1964 British-American film directed by Ronald Neame.

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The Cure

The Cure are an English rock band formed in Crawley, West Sussex, in 1976.

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The Feeling

The Feeling are an English rock band from Horsham, West Sussex.

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The Four Men: a Farrago

The Four Men: A Farrago is a novel by Hilaire Belloc that describes a long journey on foot across the English county of Sussex from Robertsbridge in the east to Harting in the west.

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The Go! Team

The Go! Team are a six-piece band from Brighton, England.

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The Guild of St Joseph and St Dominic

The Guild of St Joseph and St Dominic was a Roman Catholic art colony and experiment in communal life in early 20th century England.

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The Invisible Man (1933 film)

The Invisible Man is an American 1933 Pre-Code science fiction horror film directed by James Whale.

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The Kooks

The Kooks are an English pop rock band formed in 2004 in Brighton.

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The Mayor of Casterbridge (1921 film)

The Mayor of Casterbridge is a 1921 British silent drama film directed by Sidney Morgan and starring Fred Groves, Pauline Peters and Warwick Ward.

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The Moo Man

The Moo Man is a 2013 British documentary film, directed by Andy Heathcote, about an organic dairy farm in Sussex, England.

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The Moon and the Sledgehammer

The Moon and the Sledgehammer is a British 1971 cult documentary film directed by Philip Trevelyan and produced by Jimmy Vaughan which documents the eccentric lives of the Page family, consisting of the elderly Mr Page and his adult children Jim, Pete, Nancy and Kath, who live in a wood in Swanbrook, near Chiddingly, Sussex without mains gas, mains electricity or running water.

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The Pumpkin Eater

The Pumpkin Eater is a 1964 British drama film starring Anne Bancroft as an unusually fertile woman and Peter Finch as her philandering husband.

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The Reader (2008 film)

The Reader is a 2008 German-American romantic drama film directed by Stephen Daldry and written by David Hare, based on the 1995 German novel of the same name by Bernhard Schlink.

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The Scousers

The Scousers was a regular series of sketches from the Harry Enfield's Television Programme BBC comedy show of the early 90's.

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The Snowman

The Snowman is a children's picture book without words by English author Raymond Briggs, first published in 1978 by Hamish Hamilton in the United Kingdom, and published by Random House in the United States in November of the same year.

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They Came from Somewhere Else

They Came From Somewhere Else is a British sitcom that was broadcast on Channel 4 in the United Kingdom in 1984.

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Thomas Becket

Thomas Becket (also known as Saint Thomas of Canterbury, Thomas of London, and later Thomas à Becket; (21 December c. 1119 (or 1120) – 29 December 1170) was Archbishop of Canterbury from 1162 until his murder in 1170. He is venerated as a saint and martyr by both the Catholic Church and the Anglican Communion. He engaged in conflict with Henry II, King of England, over the rights and privileges of the Church and was murdered by followers of the king in Canterbury Cathedral. Soon after his death, he was canonised by Pope Alexander III.

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Thomas Bradwardine

Thomas Bradwardine (c. 1300 – 26 August 1349) was an English cleric, scholar, mathematician, physicist, courtier and, very briefly, Archbishop of Canterbury.

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Thomas May

Thomas May (1594/95 – 13 November 1650) was an English poet, dramatist and historian of the Renaissance era.

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Thomas Sackville, 1st Earl of Dorset

Thomas Sackville, 1st Earl of Dorset (1536 – 19 April 1608) was an English statesman, poet, and dramatist.

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Thomas Weelkes

Thomas Weelkes (baptised 25 October 1576 – 30 November 1623His will was dated 30 November, and he was buried on 1 December, which strongly suggests he died on 30 November. See his entry at Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 5th ed, 1954, vol. IX, p. 231.) was an English composer and organist.

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Tom Odell

Tom Odell, Zelt Musik Festival 2015 in Freiburg, Germany Tom Odell, Zelt Musik Festival 2015 in Freiburg, Germany Thomas Peter Odell (born 24 November 1990) is an English singer-songwriter.

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Tony Hawks

Antony Gordon Hawksworth, MBE (born 12 May 1960), known professionally as Tony Hawks, is a British comedian and author.

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Tudor architecture

The Tudor architectural style is the final development of Medieval architecture in England, during the Tudor period (1485–1603) and even beyond, and also the tentative introduction of Renaissance architecture to England.

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Understatement

Understatement is a form of speech or disclosure which contains an expression of lesser strength than what would be expected.

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University of Sussex

The University of Sussex is a public research university in Falmer, Sussex, England.

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Uppark

Uppark is a 17th-century house in South Harting, Petersfield, West Sussex, England.

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Vanessa Bell

Vanessa Bell (née Stephen; 30 May 1879 – 7 April 1961) was an English painter and interior designer, a member of the Bloomsbury Group and the sister of Virginia Woolf.

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Victorian era

In the history of the United Kingdom, the Victorian era was the period of Queen Victoria's reign, from 20 June 1837 until her death on 22 January 1901.

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Virginia Woolf

Adeline Virginia Woolf (née Stephen; 25 January 188228 March 1941) was an English writer, who is considered one of the most important modernist 20th-century authors and a pioneer in the use of stream of consciousness as a narrative device.

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Vitamin

A vitamin is an organic molecule (or related set of molecules) which is an essential micronutrient - that is, a substance which an organism needs in small quantities for the proper functioning of its metabolism - but cannot synthesize it (either at all, or in sufficient quantities), and therefore it must be obtained through the diet.

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Vivien Leigh

Vivien Leigh (born Vivian Mary Hartley, and also known as Lady Olivier after 1947; 5 November 19138 July 1967) was an English stage and film actress.

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We wunt be druv

"We wunt be druv" is the unofficial county motto of Sussex in southern England.

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Weald

The Weald is an area of South East England between the parallel chalk escarpments of the North and the South Downs.

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Weald and Downland Gridshell

The Weald and Downland Gridshell (2002) is a building designed by Buro Happold and Edward Cullinan Architects for the Weald and Downland Open Air Museum: it was shortlisted for the Stirling Prize in 2002.

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Wealden hall house

The Wealden hall house is a type of vernacular medieval timber-framed hall house traditional in the south east of England.

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West Dean, West Sussex

West Dean is a village and civil parish in the District of Chichester in West Sussex, England north of Chichester on the A286 road just west of Singleton.

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West Grinstead

West Grinstead is a village and civil parish in the Horsham District of West Sussex, England.

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West Sussex

West Sussex is a county in the south of England, bordering East Sussex (with Brighton and Hove) to the east, Hampshire to the west and Surrey to the north, and to the south the English Channel.

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Westmeston

Westmeston is a hamlet and civil parish in the Lewes District of East Sussex, England.

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Wheatear

The wheatears are passerine birds of the genus Oenanthe.

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When the Wind Blows (1986 film)

When the Wind Blows is a 1986 British animated disaster film directed by Jimmy Murakami based on Raymond Briggs' comic book of the same name.

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Wilfrid

Wilfrid (c. 633 – c. 709) was an English bishop and saint.

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Wilfrid Scawen Blunt

Wilfrid Scawen Blunt (17 August 1840 – 10 September 1922), sometimes spelled "Wilfred", was an English poet and writer.

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William Blake

William Blake (28 November 1757 – 12 August 1827) was an English poet, painter, and printmaker.

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William Collins (poet)

William Collins (25 December 1721 – 12 June 1759) was an English poet.

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William Hayley

William Hayley (9 November 1745 – 12 November 1820) was an English writer, best known as the friend and biographer of William Cowper.

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William Henry Hudson

William Henry Hudson (4 August 1841 – 18 August 1922) was an author, naturalist, and ornithologist.

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William Nicholson (writer)

William Benedict Nicholson, OBE, FRSL (born 12 January 1948) is a British screenwriter, playwright, and novelist who has been nominated twice for an Oscar.

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William Penn

William Penn (14 October 1644 – 30 July 1718) was the son of Sir William Penn, and was an English real estate entrepreneur, philosopher, early Quaker, and founder of the English North American colony the Province of Pennsylvania.

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William Shakespeare

William Shakespeare (26 April 1564 (baptised)—23 April 1616) was an English poet, playwright and actor, widely regarded as both the greatest writer in the English language, and the world's pre-eminent dramatist.

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Willingdon and Jevington

Willingdon and Jevington is one of the civil parishes in the Wealden District of East Sussex, England.

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Winnie-the-Pooh

Winnie-the-Pooh, also called Pooh Bear, is a fictional anthropomorphic teddy bear created by English author A. A. Milne.

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Wish You Were Here (1987 film)

Wish You Were Here is a 1987 British comedy-drama film starring Emily Lloyd and Tom Bell.

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Worthing

Worthing is a large seaside town in England, with borough status in West Sussex.

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Worthing Museum and Art Gallery

Worthing Museum and Art Gallery is in the centre of Worthing near the grade II* listed St Paul's.

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Worthing Symphony Orchestra

The Worthing Symphony Orchestra is the professional orchestra for the town of Worthing.

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Zoe Lyons

Zoe Ann Lyons (born 3 October 1971) is a British comedian.

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18th British Academy Film Awards

The 18th British Film Awards, given by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts in 1965, honoured the best films of 1964.

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References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Sussex

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