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Charles Warren

Index Charles Warren

General Sir Charles Warren, (7 February 1840 – 21 January 1927) was an officer in the British Royal Engineers. [1]

140 relations: 'Umayri, A Study in Terror, Aaiha, Adolphus Frederick Alexander Woodford, Al-Na'ani, Ancient city walls around the City of David, Anno Dracula, Archaeological remnants of the Jerusalem Temple, Battle of Jericho, Battle of Spion Kop, Battle of the Tugela Heights, Bechuanaland Expedition, Bechuanaland Protectorate, Biblical archaeology, Birket Israel, Bridgnorth, Bridgnorth Endowed School, British Bechuanaland, Cape Garrison Artillery, Cape Town Rifles, Catherine Eddowes, Cave S, Cecil Burney, Charles Edmond Knox, Charles Maude, Charles Warren (disambiguation), City of David, Claude Lowther, Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis, Deir al-Dubban, Dithakong, Douglas Labalmondière, Eastern Wall, Edmund Henderson, Edward Arthur Maund, Edward Charles Ingouville-Williams, Edward Henry Palmer, Elizabeth Cass, Excavations at the Temple Mount, Frederick Carrington, From Hell (film), Gibeah, Gibraltar Museum, Godfrey Lushington, Goulston Street graffito, Hasmonean royal winter palaces, Hercules Robinson, 1st Baron Rosmead, Hugh Fraser (actor), Huldah Gates, J. E. Hanauer, ..., Jack the Ripper, Jack the Ripper (1988 TV series), Jack the Ripper: The Final Solution, James Melville Babington, James Monro, January 1900, Jericho, Jerusalem Water Channel, John Copley, 1st Baron Lyndhurst, John Talbot Coke, John Ward (trade unionist), List of archaeological excavations in Jerusalem, List of archaeologists, List of British Army full generals, List of British generals and brigadiers, List of colonial governors of Bechuanaland, List of Fellows of the Royal Society W, X, Y, Z, List of Freemasons (E–Z), List of Old Bridgnorthians, List of places named after people, List of special elections to the California State Assembly, List of Vanity Fair (British magazine) caricatures (1885–89), LMLK seal, Mary Jane Kelly, Melville Macnaghten, Mesha Stele, Michael York, MMST, Mount Hermon, Murder by Decree, Natal Field Force, Palestine Exploration Fund, Paul Methuen, 3rd Baron Methuen, People of Kimberley, Police dog, Postage stamps and postal history of British Bechuanaland, Quatuor Coronati Lodge, Randy Myers (golf trainer), Receiver of the Metropolitan Police, Relief of Ladysmith, Richmond William Hullett, Robert Donston Stephenson, Robert Freke Gould, Robinson's Arch, Royal Regiment of Canadian Artillery, Rudd Concession, Scalby Manor, Scarborough, Second Boer War, Second Temple, Sheffield Hallam (UK Parliament constituency), Sidney Shippard, Siloam inscription, Siloam tunnel, Silwan necropolis, Sir Henry Wilson, 1st Baronet, Solomon's Temple, South African Light Horse, St Cyprian's Cathedral, Kimberley, State of Goshen, Stellaland, Struthion Pool, T-Bag, Tell es-Sultan, Temple Mount, Temples of Mount Hermon, Temples of the Beqaa Valley, The A.R.K. Report, Thomas Adams School, Thomas Arnold (police officer), Three-age system, Thursday of the Dead, Tomb of Simeon the Just, United States House of Representatives elections, 1936, United States presidential debates, Wall of Jericho, Warren (name), Warren's Gate, Warren's Shaft, Warrenton, Northern Cape, Western Wall Tunnel, Whitechapel murders, Zarnuqa, 1840 in archaeology, 1840 in Wales, 1868 in archaeology, 1880 in literature, 1883 Birthday Honours, 1927, 1927 in archaeology, 5th Infantry Division (United Kingdom). Expand index (90 more) »

'Umayri

Tall al-’Umayri is an archaeological dig site in western Jordan that dates back to The Early Bronze Age and extends forwards to the Hellenistic Period.

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A Study in Terror

A Study in Terror is a 1965 British thriller film directed by James Hill and starring John Neville as Sherlock Holmes and Donald Houston as Dr. Watson.

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Aaiha

Aaiha (or Aiha) (عيحا) is a village, plain, lake, and temporary wetland situated in the Rashaya District and south of the Beqaa Governorate in Lebanon.

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Adolphus Frederick Alexander Woodford

Adolphus Frederick Alexander Woodford (1821–1887) was the eldest son of Alexander George Woodford, a career soldier who was already a hero of Waterloo, and would rise to Field Marshal, ending his days in command of Chelsea Hospital.

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Al-Na'ani

Al-Na'ani, also called Al-Ni'ana, was a Palestinian Arab village in the Ramle Subdistrict of Mandatory Palestine.

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Ancient city walls around the City of David

The ancient city walls around of the City of David refer to what archaeologist Eilat Mazar believes are the remains of the fortifications that once encompassed the city.

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Anno Dracula

Anno Dracula is a 1992 novel by British writer Kim Newman, the first in the ''Anno Dracula'' series.

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Archaeological remnants of the Jerusalem Temple

Several kinds of archaeological remnants of the Jerusalem Temple exist, both for the Temple that stood before the destruction of Jerusalem by Babylonia in 586 BCE, and for the rebuilt Temple that stood until destruction by Rome in the year 70.

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Battle of Jericho

In the narrative of the conquest of Canaan in the Book of Joshua, the Battle of Jericho is the first battle that is described.

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Battle of Spion Kop

The Battle of Spion Kop (Slag bij Spionkop.; Slag van Spioenkop) was fought about west-south-west of Ladysmith on the hilltop of Spioenkop(1) along the Tugela River, Natal in South Africa from 23–24 January 1900.

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Battle of the Tugela Heights

The Battle of Tugela (or Thukela) Heights, consisted of a series of military actions lasting from 14 February through 27 February 1900 in which General Sir Redvers Buller's British army forced Louis Botha's Boer army to lift the Siege of Ladysmith during the Second Boer War.

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Bechuanaland Expedition

The Bechuanaland Expedition or Warren Expedition, of late 1884/1885, was a British military expedition to Bechuanaland, to assert British sovereignty in the face of encroachments from Germany, the Transvaal and to suppress the Boer freebooter states of Stellaland and Goshen.

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Bechuanaland Protectorate

The Bechuanaland Protectorate was a protectorate established on 31 March 1885, by the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in southern Africa.

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Biblical archaeology

Biblical archaeology involves the recovery and scientific investigation of the material remains of past cultures that can illuminate the periods and descriptions in the Bible, be they from the Old Testament (Tanakh) or from the New Testament, as well as the history and cosmogony of the Judeo-Christian religions.

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Birket Israel

Birket Israel (trans. Pool of Israel) also Birket Israil or Birket Isra'in, abbreviated from Birket Asbât Beni Israìl (trans. Pool of the Tribes of the Children of Israel) was a public cistern located on the north-eastern corner of the Temple Mount, in Jerusalem.

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Bridgnorth

Bridgnorth is a town in Shropshire, England.

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Bridgnorth Endowed School

Bridgnorth Endowed School is a coeducational secondary school and sixth form with academy status, located in the market town of Bridgnorth in the rural county of Shropshire, England.

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British Bechuanaland

British Bechuanaland was a short-lived Crown colony of the United Kingdom that existed in southern Africa from its formation on 1 Sep 1885 until its annexation to the neighbouring Cape Colony on 16 Nov 1895.

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Cape Garrison Artillery

The Cape Garrison Artillery (CGA) is a reserve force regiment of the South African Army Air Defence Artillery Formation.

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Cape Town Rifles

The Cape Town Rifles (nicknamed Dukes) is an infantry regiment of the South African Army.

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Catherine Eddowes

Catherine "Kate" Eddowes (14 April 1842 – 30 September 1888) was one of the victims in the Whitechapel murders.

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Cave S

Cave S is a limestone cave in the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar.

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Cecil Burney

Admiral of the Fleet Sir Cecil Burney, 1st Baronet, (15 May 1858 – 5 June 1929) was a Royal Navy officer.

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Charles Edmond Knox

Lieutenant General Sir Charles Edmond Knox, KCB (28 February 1846 – 1 November 1938) was an Anglo-Irish soldier of the British Army.

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Charles Maude

Charles Bulmer Maude (1848 - 1927) was an Anglican priest in the last third of the nineteenth century and the first third of the twentieth.

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Charles Warren (disambiguation)

Charles Warren (1840–1927) was a British Army officer and head of the London Metropolitan Police.

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City of David

The City of David (עיר דוד, Ir David; literal translation to مدينة داوود, Madina Dawud, common Arabic name: وادي حلوه, Wadi Hilweh) is an Israeli settlement and the archaeological site which is speculated to compose the original urban core of ancient Jerusalem.

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Claude Lowther

Colonel Claude William Henry Lowther (1870 – 16 June 1929) was an English Conservative politician.

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Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis

The Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis is the head of London's Metropolitan Police Service.

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Deir al-Dubban

Deir al-Dubban (دير الدبان, from Dayr ad-Dhubban, literally, the "Monastery of the Flies") was a small Palestinian village northwest of Hebron, near the modern village of Luzit, between Jerusalem, and Ashkelon.

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Dithakong

Dithakong is the name of a place east of Kuruman in the Northern Cape, South Africa, which had been a major destination for several of the earliest nineteenth century expeditions from the Cape to the interior of the subcontinent.

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Douglas Labalmondière

Lieutenant-Colonel Douglas William Parish Labalmondière CB (1815 – 8 March 1893) was the first Assistant Commissioner (Administrative) of the London Metropolitan Police and acted as Commissioner for three months in 1868–1869.

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Eastern Wall

The Eastern Wall is an ancient structure in Jerusalem that is both part of the eastern side of the city wall of Jerusalem and the eastern wall of the ancient Temple Mount.

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Edmund Henderson

Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Edmund Yeamans Walcott Henderson KCB (19 April 1821 – 8 December 1896) was an officer in the British Army who was Comptroller-General of Convicts in Western Australia from 1850 to 1863, Home Office Surveyor-General of Prisons from 1863 to 1869, and Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis, head of the London Metropolitan Police, from 1869 to 1886.

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Edward Arthur Maund

Edward Arthur Maund (1851 - 17 March 1932, Hampstead) was an African explorer and Rhodesian pioneer.

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Edward Charles Ingouville-Williams

Major-General Edward Charles Ingouville-Williams CB, DSO (13 December 1861 – 22 July 1916) was a British Army officer of the First World War.

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Edward Henry Palmer

Edward Henry Palmer (7 August 1840 – August 1882) — known as E.H. Palmer — was an English orientalist and explorer.

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Elizabeth Cass

Elizabeth Langley (née Cass; 1863 – 1956) was an English seamstress and dress designer whose mistaken arrest for prostitution in 1887 became a minor cause célèbre.

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Excavations at the Temple Mount

A number of archaeological excavations at the Temple Mount—a celebrated and contentious religious site in the Old City of Jerusalem—have taken place over the last 150 years.

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Frederick Carrington

Major General Sir Frederick Carrington, (23 August 1844, Cheltenham – 22 March 1913, Cheltenham), was a British soldier and friend of Cecil John Rhodes.

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From Hell (film)

From Hell is a 2001 American mystery horror film directed by the Hughes brothers and loosely based on the graphic novel From Hell by Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell about the Jack the Ripper murders.

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Gibeah

Gibeah (גבעה Giv'a) is a place name appearing in several books of the Bible.

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Gibraltar Museum

The Gibraltar Museum is a national museum of history, culture and natural history located within the city centre of the British overseas territory of Gibraltar.

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Godfrey Lushington

Sir Godfrey Lushington, GCMG, KCB (8 March 1832 – 5 February 1907), British civil servant and promoter of prison reform, was Permanent Under-Secretary of State of the Home Office of the United Kingdom from 1886 to 1895.

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Goulston Street graffito

The Goulston Street graffito was a sentence written on a wall beside a clue in the 1888 Whitechapel murders investigation.

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Hasmonean royal winter palaces

The Hasmonean royal winter palaces are a complex of Hasmonean and Herodian buildings from the Second Temple period, which were discovered in the western plain of Jericho valley, at Tulul Abu al-'Alayiq, near the place where the Roman road connecting Jericho with Jerusalem enters Wadi Qelt.

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Hercules Robinson, 1st Baron Rosmead

Hercules George Robert Robinson, 1st Baron Rosmead, (19 December 1824 – 28 October 1897), was a British colonial administrator who became the 5th Governor of Hong Kong and subsequently, the 14th Governor of New South Wales, the first Governor of Fiji, and the 8th Governor of New Zealand.

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Hugh Fraser (actor)

Hugh Matthew Fraser (born 23 October 1945) is an English actor, theatre director and author.

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Huldah Gates

The Huldah Gates (שערי חולדה, Sha'arei Hulda) are the two sets of now-blocked gates in the Southern Wall of the Temple Mount, situated in Jerusalem's Old City.

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J. E. Hanauer

James (John) Edward Hanauer (1850–1938) was an author, photographer, and Canon of St. George's Cathedral in Jerusalem.

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Jack the Ripper

Jack the Ripper is the best-known name for an unidentified serial killer generally believed to have been active in the largely impoverished areas in and around the Whitechapel district of London in 1888.

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Jack the Ripper (1988 TV series)

Jack the Ripper is a 1988 British television film drama based on the conspiracy theory about the notorious Jack the Ripper murder spree in Victorian London.

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Jack the Ripper: The Final Solution

Jack the Ripper: The Final Solution is a book written by Stephen Knight first published in 1976.

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James Melville Babington

Lieutenant General Sir James Melville Babington (31 July 1854 – 15 June 1936) was a British Army officer and a renowned leader of cavalry, making a name for himself for his actions in the Second Boer War.

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James Monro

James Monro CB (1838 – 28 January 1920) was a lawyer who became the first Assistant Commissioner (Crime) of the London Metropolitan Police and also served as Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis from 1888 to 1890.

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January 1900

The following events occurred in January 1900.

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Jericho

Jericho (יְרִיחוֹ; أريحا) is a city in the Palestinian Territories and is located near the Jordan River in the West Bank.

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Jerusalem Water Channel

The central drainage channel of Second Temple Jerusalem is an archaeological site in Jerusalem.

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John Copley, 1st Baron Lyndhurst

John Singleton Copley, 1st Baron Lyndhurst, (21 May 1772 – 12 October 1863) was a British lawyer and politician.

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John Talbot Coke

Major-General John Talbot Coke (1841–1912) of Trusley in South Derbyshire was a British Army officer that served in the 25th Foot (King's Own Scottish Borderers) between 1859 and 1901.

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John Ward (trade unionist)

Lieutenant-Colonel John Ward (21 November 1866 – 19 December 1934) was an English Liberal Party politician, trade union leader and soldier.

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List of archaeological excavations in Jerusalem

List of archaeological excavations in Jerusalem is an incomplete list of archaeological excavations in Jerusalem.

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List of archaeologists

This is a list of archaeologists – people who study or practise archaeology, the study of the human past through material remains.

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List of British Army full generals

This is a list of full generals in the British Army since the Acts of Union 1707.

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List of British generals and brigadiers

This is a list of people who held general officer rank or the rank of brigadier (together now recognized as starred officers) in the British Army, Royal Marines, British Indian Army or other military force.

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List of colonial governors of Bechuanaland

This is a list of the colonial heads of Bechuanaland Protectorate, which gained independence as Botswana in 1966.

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List of Fellows of the Royal Society W, X, Y, Z

About 8,000 Fellows have been elected to the Royal Society of London since its inception in 1660.

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List of Freemasons (E–Z)

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List of Old Bridgnorthians

The following is a list of notable Old Bridgnorthians, former pupils of Bridgnorth Grammar School (now Bridgnorth Endowed School) in Bridgnorth, Shropshire, England.

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List of places named after people

There are a number of places named after famous people.

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List of special elections to the California State Assembly

Special elections to the California State Assembly are called by the Governor of California when a vacancy arises within the State Assembly.

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List of Vanity Fair (British magazine) caricatures (1885–89)

>> List of ''Vanity Fair'' caricatures (1890–94) The following is from a list of caricatures published 1885–89 by the British magazine Vanity Fair (1868–1914).

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LMLK seal

LMLK seals are ancient Hebrew seals stamped on the handles of large storage jars dating from reign of King Hezekiah (circa 700 BC) discovered mostly in and around Jerusalem.

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Mary Jane Kelly

Mary Jane Kelly (c. 1863 – 9 November 1888), also known as Marie Jeanette Kelly, Fair Emma, Ginger, and Black Mary, is widely believed to be the final victim of the notorious unidentified serial killer Jack the Ripper, who killed and mutilated several women in the Whitechapel area of London from late August to early November 1888.

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Melville Macnaghten

Sir Melville Leslie Macnaghten CB KPM (16 June 1853, Woodford, London −12 May 1921) was Assistant Commissioner (Crime) of the London Metropolitan Police from 1903 to 1913.

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Mesha Stele

The Mesha Stele, also known as the Moabite Stone, is a stele (inscribed stone) set up around 840 BCE by King Mesha of Moab (a kingdom located in modern Jordan).

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Michael York

Michael York, OBE (born Michael Hugh Johnson; 27 March 1942) is an English actor.

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MMST

MMST (Hebrew Mem, Mem, Shin, Tau) appears exclusively on LMLK seal inscriptions, seen in archaeological findings in Israel, and its meaning has been the subject of continual controversy.

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Mount Hermon

Mount Hermon (جبل الشيخ or جبل حرمون / ALA-LC: Jabal al-Shaykh ("Mountain of the Sheikh") or Jabal Haramun; הר חרמון, Har Hermon) is a mountain cluster constituting the southern end of the Anti-Lebanon mountain range.

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Murder by Decree

Murder by Decree is a 1979 British-Canadian mystery thriller film directed by Bob Clark.

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Natal Field Force

The Natal Field Force (NFF) was a multi-battalion field force originally formed by Major-General Sir George Pomeroy Colley in Natal for the First Boer War.

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Palestine Exploration Fund

The Palestine Exploration Fund is a British society based in London.

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Paul Methuen, 3rd Baron Methuen

Field Marshal Paul Sanford Methuen, 3rd Baron Methuen, (1 September 1845 – 30 October 1932) was a British Army officer.

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People of Kimberley

This is a list of the famous and notable people from Kimberley, Northern Cape, South Africa.

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Police dog

A police dog, known in some English-speaking countries as a "K-9" or "K9" (a homophone of "canine"), is a dog that is specifically trained to assist police and other law-enforcement personnel.

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Postage stamps and postal history of British Bechuanaland

This is a survey of the postage stamps and postal history of British Bechuanaland.

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Quatuor Coronati Lodge

Quatuor Coronati Lodge No.

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Randy Myers (golf trainer)

Randy Myers is a golf fitness instructor.

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Receiver of the Metropolitan Police

The Receiver, formally called The Receiver for the Metropolitan Police District (and sometimes referred to early in the post's existence as the Receiver-General), was until 2000 the chief financial officer of the Metropolitan Police in London, the Treasurer of the Metropolitan Police Fund.

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Relief of Ladysmith

When the Second Boer War broke out on 11 October 1899, the Boers had a numeric superiority within Southern Africa.

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Richmond William Hullett

Richmond William Hullett (15 November 1843 - 1914) was an English 19th century headmaster, explorer and plant collector.

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Robert Donston Stephenson

Robert Donston Stephenson (also known as Roslyn D'Onston) (20 April 1841 – 9 October 1916) was a writer and journalist, chiefly known for having been made a potential suspect in the Jack the Ripper investigation and for his personal theory as to the identity of the murderer.

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Robert Freke Gould

Robert Freke Gould (10 November 1836 – 26 March 1915) was a soldier, barrister and prominent Freemason and Masonic historian.

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Robinson's Arch

Robinson's Arch is the name given to a monumental staircase carried by an unusually wide stone arch, which once stood at the southwestern corner of the Temple Mount.

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Royal Regiment of Canadian Artillery

The Royal Regiment of Canadian Artillery (Le Régiment royal de l'Artillerie canadienne) is the artillery personnel branch of the Canadian Army.

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Rudd Concession

The Rudd Concession, a written concession for exclusive mining rights in Matabeleland, Mashonaland and other adjoining territories in what is today Zimbabwe, was granted by King Lobengula of Matabeleland to Charles Rudd, James Rochfort Maguire and Francis Thompson, three agents acting on behalf of the South African-based politician and businessman Cecil Rhodes, on 30 October 1888.

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Scalby Manor, Scarborough

Scalby Manor near Scarborough, North Yorkshire was built in 1885 by Edwin Brough.

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Second Boer War

The Second Boer War (11 October 1899 – 31 May 1902) was fought between the British Empire and two Boer states, the South African Republic (Republic of Transvaal) and the Orange Free State, over the Empire's influence in South Africa.

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Second Temple

The Second Temple (בֵּית־הַמִּקְדָּשׁ הַשֵּׁנִי, Beit HaMikdash HaSheni) was the Jewish Holy Temple which stood on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem during the Second Temple period, between 516 BCE and 70 CE.

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Sheffield Hallam (UK Parliament constituency)

Sheffield Hallam is a constituency represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2017 by Jared O'Mara.

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Sidney Shippard

Sir Sidney Godolphin Alexander Shippard, KCMG (1837 – 29 March 1902) was a British barrister and colonial administrator, who served as Resident Commissioner of the Bechuanaland Protectorate 1885–1895.

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Siloam inscription

The Siloam inscription or Shiloah inscription (כתובת השילוח) or Silwan inscription is a passage of inscribed text found in the Siloam tunnel which brings water from the Gihon Spring to the Pool of Siloam, located in the City of David in East Jerusalem neighborhood of Shiloah or Silwan.

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Siloam tunnel

The Siloam Tunnel (נקבת השילוח, Nikbat HaShiloah), also known as Hezekiah's Tunnel, is a water tunnel that was carved underneath the City of David in Jerusalem in ancient times.

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Silwan necropolis

The Silwan necropolis is the most important ancient cemetery in Israel, and is assumed to have been used by the highest-ranking officials residing in Jerusalem.

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Sir Henry Wilson, 1st Baronet

Field Marshal Sir Henry Hughes Wilson, 1st Baronet, (5 May 1864 – 22 June 1922) was one of the most senior British Army staff officers of the First World War and was briefly an Irish unionist politician.

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Solomon's Temple

According to the Hebrew Bible, Solomon's Temple, also known as the First Temple, was the Holy Temple (בֵּית־הַמִּקְדָּשׁ: Beit HaMikdash) in ancient Jerusalem before its destruction by Nebuchadnezzar II after the Siege of Jerusalem of 587 BCE and its subsequent replacement with the Second Temple in the 6th century BCE.

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South African Light Horse

The South African Light Horse regiment of the British Army were raised in Cape Colony in 1899 and disbanded in 1907.

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St Cyprian's Cathedral, Kimberley

The Cathedral Church of St Cyprian the Martyr, Kimberley, is the seat of the Bishop of the Kimberley and Kuruman, Anglican Church of Southern Africa.

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State of Goshen

Goshen, officially known as the State of Goshen was a short-lived Boer Republic in southern Africa founded by Boers opposing British rule in the region.

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Stellaland

The Republic of Stellaland (Republiek Stellaland) was from 1882 to 1883 a Boer republic located in an area of British Bechuanaland (now in South Africa's North West Province), west of the Transvaal.

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Struthion Pool

The Struthion Pool, effectually translated from the Greek as "Sparrow Pool" (Aramaic: אשווח צפרא) is a large cuboid cistern beneath the Convent of the Sisters of Zion in the Old City of Jerusalem, built in 1st century BCE and perhaps even earlier.

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T-Bag

T-Bag was a British television series about an eponymous witch-like character and her assistant, T-shirt.

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Tell es-Sultan

Tell es-Sultan (Sultan's Hill) is a UNESCO-listed archaeological site in the West Bank, located two kilometres north of the centre of Jericho.

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Temple Mount

The Temple Mount (הַר הַבַּיִת, Har HaBáyit, "Mount of the House "), known to Muslims as the Haram esh-Sharif (الحرم الشريف, al-Ḥaram al-Šarīf, "the Noble Sanctuary", or الحرم القدسي الشريف, al-Ḥaram al-Qudsī al-Šarīf, "the Noble Sanctuary of Jerusalem") and the Al Aqsa Compound is a hill located in the Old City of Jerusalem that for thousands of years has been venerated as a holy site, in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam alike.

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Temples of Mount Hermon

The Temples of Mount Hermon are around thirty Roman shrines and Roman temples that are dispersed around the slopes of Mount Hermon in Lebanon, Israel and Syria.

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Temples of the Beqaa Valley

The Temples of the Beqaa Valley are a number of shrines and Roman temples that are dispersed around the Beqaa Valley in Lebanon.

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The A.R.K. Report

The A.R.K. Report – Secret for the Century is a 2013 action-adventure sci-fi short film and television pilot produced by Canadian-Israeli research professor, Harry Moskoff and directed by Shmuel Hoffman.

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Thomas Adams School

Thomas Adams School is a coeducational secondary school and sixth form in Wem, Shropshire, England.

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Thomas Arnold (police officer)

Police Superintendent Thomas Arnold (7 April 1835 – 1907) was a British policeman of the Victorian era best known for his involvement in the hunt for Jack the Ripper in 1888.

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Three-age system

The three-age system is the categorization of history into time periods divisible by three; for example, the Stone Age, Bronze Age, and Iron Age, although it also refers to other tripartite divisions of historic time periods.

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Thursday of the Dead

Thursday of the Dead (خميس الأموات, Khamis al-Amwat), also known as Thursday of the Secrets (خميس الأسرار, Khamis al-Asrar) or Thursday of the EggsMorgenstern, 1966, p. 158.

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Tomb of Simeon the Just

The Tomb of Simeon the Just or Simeon the Righteous (קבר שמעון הצדיק; translit. Kever Shimon haTzadik) is an ancient tomb in Jerusalem traditionally believed to be the burial place of Simeon the Just.

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United States House of Representatives elections, 1936

The 1936 United States House of Representatives elections was an election for the United States House of Representatives in 1936 which coincided with President Franklin D. Roosevelt's landslide re-election.

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United States presidential debates

During presidential elections in the United States, it has become customary for the main candidates (almost always the candidates of the two largest parties, currently the Democratic Party and the Republican Party) to engage in a debate.

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Wall of Jericho

The Wall of Jericho was a Pre-Pottery Neolithic A (PPNA) defensive or flood protection wall suggested to date to approximately 8000 BCE.

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Warren (name)

Warren is a common English and Irish surname and a masculine given name derived from the Yorkshire surname, "T’ Warren", a reference to various places named Warrington and Warrenville.

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Warren's Gate

Warren's Gate, first described by the nineteenth century surveyor Charles Warren, is an ancient entrance into the Temple platform in Jerusalem which lies about into the Western Wall Tunnel.

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Warren's Shaft

Warren's Shaft is an archaeological feature in Jerusalem discovered in 1867 by British engineer Sir Charles Warren (1840–1927).

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Warrenton, Northern Cape

Warrenton is an agricultural town of approximately 18,000 people in the Northern Cape province of South Africa, situated north of Kimberley on the Vaal River.

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Western Wall Tunnel

The Western Wall Tunnel (מנהרת הכותל, translit.: Minheret Hakotel) is an underground tunnel exposing the full length of the Western Wall.

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Whitechapel murders

The Whitechapel murders were committed in or near the impoverished Whitechapel district in the East End of London between 3 April 1888 and 13 February 1891.

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Zarnuqa

Zarnuqa (زرنوقة), also Zarnuga,Reuter, 2004, pp.

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1840 in archaeology

1840 in archaeology.

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1840 in Wales

This article is about the particular significance of the year 1840 to Wales and its people.

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1868 in archaeology

The year 1868 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1880 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1880.

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1883 Birthday Honours

The 1883 Birthday Honours were appointments by Queen Victoria to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by citizens of the British Empire.

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1927

No description.

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1927 in archaeology

The year 1927 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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5th Infantry Division (United Kingdom)

The 5th Infantry Division was a regular army infantry division of the British Army.

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Redirects here:

Charles Warren (British soldier), General Sir Charles Warren, GCMG, KCB, FRS, Sir Charles Warren, Warren, Charles.

References

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

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